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<blockquote data-quote="Taipan" data-source="post: 33115" data-attributes="member: 11681"><p>I very much doubt that it would - the item you are referring to is resistive spark plug leads and capacitors on the spark coil.</p><p></p><p>I believe that your problem is caused by the wood case - it needs to be a metal case to effectively ground all the EMI that is generated within your PC.</p><p></p><p>If you want to retain the wood PC case, then you need to line the inside of the case with an electrically conductive coating - aluminium foil, for example, or a spray-on coating (paint) that is very conductive. Dell, for example, do this on the inside of their plastic PC cases. This conductive surface needs to be electrically connected to the PC ground to be effective.</p><p></p><p>BUT, before you go to all that trouble (to line the wood case with a conductive surface), I suggest you move the motherboard and all the other items into a standard metal PC case to prove that this will solve the problem.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Taipan, post: 33115, member: 11681"] I very much doubt that it would - the item you are referring to is resistive spark plug leads and capacitors on the spark coil. I believe that your problem is caused by the wood case - it needs to be a metal case to effectively ground all the EMI that is generated within your PC. If you want to retain the wood PC case, then you need to line the inside of the case with an electrically conductive coating - aluminium foil, for example, or a spray-on coating (paint) that is very conductive. Dell, for example, do this on the inside of their plastic PC cases. This conductive surface needs to be electrically connected to the PC ground to be effective. BUT, before you go to all that trouble (to line the wood case with a conductive surface), I suggest you move the motherboard and all the other items into a standard metal PC case to prove that this will solve the problem. [/QUOTE]
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