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![]() On Jan 25, 8:14 pm, Jake Brodsky wrote: Ron J wrote: So I was doing some reading and one article mentioned that a group mounted anFMtransmitteron ahotairballoon. I was also researching on the methods used by the FCC to measured field strengths. So how does one go about measuring field strength levels if a company somewhere, somehow, sometime decides to mount theirtransmitteron ahotair balloonto avoid building a tower? Because the communications are likely to be line of sight, you could use inverse square law equations to predict the signal strength. Actually, no, inverse square (free space) will underestimate the received signal strength. There's also a "height above the ground" factor that would need to be taken into account for UHF and VHF links, because the ground reflections are significant on both ends of the link. A program called Radio Mobile (google for it) can do the modeling over your terrain. Or, you can probably find one of the quick approximations for uniform terrain. The usual model is called Longley-Rice, but Bullington has a quick approximation. |
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