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Old December 9th 05, 05:46 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Reg Edwards
 
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"Richard Harrison" wrote in message
...
Reg, G4FGQ wrote:
"According to textbooks, the field strength from 1 KW at 1 kilometre

=
300 millivolts per metre."

Terman agrees with Reg`s signal strength produced by 1 KW radiated

at a
distance of 1 kilometer of: 300 millivolts per meter.

There are some conditions. The transmitting antenna is vertical and
short compared with a 1/4-wavelength. It is nondirectional in a
horizontal plane. The height of both antennas is low enough so that

the
space wave does not dominate propagation between them. Terman`s

field
strength derives from the equation first given by Sommerfeld and
includes a factor aounting for ground losses.

Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI


========================================

Richard, thanks for the confirmation.

All you have to do now is calculate from the field strength the power
available to a matched receiver at 20 MHz with a vertical receiving
antenna 1 metre high.

If I tell you the antenna's radiation resistance is 1.758 ohms then
you can forget about the frequency.
----
Reg.