"art" wrote in message
ups.com...
I haven't been on the air for a long time but I don't remember any
conversations
as to the upper lobe being used for communication. I always assumed
that
I was using the main lobe. Today I was messing around with some
antenna designs
and I arrived at one where there was only the lower single lobe to the
front
with the upper lobe somehow being removed.
I have no idea what the ommission of any upper lobe would have of any
consequence.
Anybody had experience with this sort of thing?
I suppose that in the early stages of propagation the lower lobe
could make
a connection where as the upper lobe transmission may well be absorbed
by the upper layers that had not yet obtained reflected powers, but
that is
just conjector on my part.
Art
The upper lobes may participate in local (non-skip) comms. The mode is
near-vertical incidence skywave, NVIS.
See
http://www.tactical-link.com/field_deployed_nvis.htm, among others.
We have a local 10m net every week and some of the stations experience a
slow fade or flutter which we have taken to be returns of NVIS that are
arriving with a slight doppler shift off a layer whose height is changing.
I won't swear to this; I am also engaging in conjecture. However, when the
10m DX is in, the distant stations don't ever have this flutter. I use a
horizontal antenna and the station that has the most variation most often is
also horizontal. (The clues keep piling up.)
BTW, the articles about NVIS seem NOT to address freqs as high as the 10m
band. Make of this what you will.
73,
"Sal"