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![]() Anyone who says you can't revive a dead horse with a good, firm beating has not met this group ![]() I suspect that there are several points of agreement with the majority of the group, however not everyone will agree, heck I may choose to disagree with something right after I write it...... That dry wind will cause high voltage charging -and arcing- of insulated antennas and static noise, especially on long wires - that this is mostly friction charging, a similar mechanism to rubbing silk on glass, though charged body impact of dust may be relevant... That dry, falling/blowing snow causes extreme levels of static noise on insulated antennas - by mixed phenomenon of friction static and charged body impact... That static noise builds up as a rain front approaches, with or without associated wind... That this static noise is separate from lighting discharge impulses.... That lightning discharges cause noise - inductive noise... That rain causes static noise on insulated antennas - charged body impact primarily, I don't know about friction charge... That heavy rain 'may' lessen associated static noise.... I haven't personally experienced this - is it the magnitude of the rainfall or the fact that the highly charged front has passed on by and the falling drops are now less charged? That a grounded tower with an antenna stack can have the top antenna experience heavy static noise while lower antennas will have significantly less static roar... my opinion is that coronal discharge from the top antenna elements is inducing noise into the top antenna circuit, and that the coronal flow that would have occurred off the lower antenna elements is suppressed and drained to the top antenna by the differential voltage on the higher antenna So, in the end it may be that the charging of the antenna circuit by either friction or charged body impact causes less noise than the subsequent coronal flow back off the highly charged antenna body... We know that the antenna is a "convertor", that is it converts a moving electron departing the antenna into a photon - and vice versa - causing an RF signal in the process... Certainly, this topic of the role that coronal discharge v/s the charging mechanism plays in antenna noise would make a good dissertation subject for a PhD thesis... Doctoral candidates out there, hint, hint!... denny |
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