Braid-breaker


A braid-breaker is a filter that prevents television interference. In many cases of TVI, caused by a high field strength of a nearby high frequency transmitter, the aerial down lead plugged into the back of the TV acts as a longwire antenna or as a simple vertical element. The radio frequency current flowing through the tuner of the TV tends to generate harmonics which then spoil the viewing.
The braid breaker works by preventing RF signals picked up on the outside flowing into the TV set, while passing RF inside the coax from the antenna.

Designs

Designs for diminishing unwanted signals are based on two types of filters: a “choke” filter which blocks signals in the electrical mode most interference uses, and filters that selectively admit or impede signals depending on the signal frequency.
Further, carefully chosen combinations of filters of either one type or both types multiply each other's effects, so that even if only slightly different, two filters are more effective than a single filter, or either filter alone.

Ferrite choke

“Chokes” work by blocking signals traveling via common mode and pass through differential-mode or “balanced” currents unchanged. In the common mode all signals running along all the wires travel in the same direction. When the unwanted signal is only in the common mode then the desired signal can pass through the filter via the differential-mode.
One design is a snap-on ferrite choke, fastened over the aerial cable just before it plugs into the TV set. The UHF signal is sent in differential-mode, that has equal and opposite currents running on the interior surfaces of the conductors. Those two opposite currents lie close enough together for their magnetic fields to cancel each other, and so those signal currents don't couple magnetically with the ferrite, and pass through unaffected.
However currents that are traveling in the same direction on the two conductors re-enforce each other's magnetic fields, which are channeled through the ferrite. The ferrite in effect enhances the magnetic fields thousands of times, by keeping it concentrated near the surface of the ferrite, rather than allowing the fields to spread out. The common mode alternating currents are then impeded by the magnetic fields they themselves created.
So “choke” is a very good name: The ferrite in effect “chokes off” the signal path for interference that generally travels via common mode currents, but leaves unaffected the desired signals which are typically arranged to flow via differential mode current.

High-pass filter

The other type of filters used are based on frequency: Below their operating frequency limit, inductors impede signals at higher frequencies more, and admit low frequencies, whereas capacitors do the opposite: capacitors admit high frequencies but impede low frequencies. These can be played-off against each other to impede or admit signals based on frequency.
A simple design for a high-pass filter consists of two 4.7 pF ceramic capacitors and two simple air-core inductor coils. The design is a symmetric network: The line is cut and the coils are connected from the braid to the core of the coaxial cable ends, while the capacitors bridge the cut, one capacitor connecting core-to-core and the other reconnecting the cut outer shield braids.
As an extra precaution, a 1.5 resistor is wired in parallel with the capacitor connecting the shields. The resistor acts as a “slow leak” on the ground wire that prevents buildup of static electricity on the TV aerial, but is too high a resistance to pass a signal carried along the cable, which operates near 72 Ω.
The impedance of the capacitors is very large for shortwave signals, below 50 MHz, but for UHF TV signals above 450 MHz their impedance is very small. In the opposite sense, the impedance of the coils connecting the inner and outer wires at the lower frequencies is very small, while for the wanted UHF signals the coils have a very high impedance. Hence the network does the following:
An even better option is to use both a choke and a high-pass filter, since the filter described above may not be as effective for common-mode currents, which the choke will selectively remove.