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Roy Lewallen wrote in
: .... The improvement noted by increasing the distance between the radiating conductor and the consumer electronics (or power or other wiring they're connected to) can be much greater than an "inverse square law" would imply. That's because a lot of the problems with interference occur in the near field of the radiating conductor. In the far field, the field strength is inversely proportional to the distance (the power density follows the "inverse square law"). But in some parts of the near field, the field strength varies as the inverse *cube* of the distance. So even a small increase in distance can often have quite a dramatic effect on interference level. Roy, The NTIA's long awaited second report on BPL has some interesting results of NEC simulations to support the Part 15 distance extrapolation factor of 40dB/decade on slant distance below 30MHz. NTIA have models at a range of frequencies that explore the validity of the above factor, part II which contains the graphs of the simulations makes an interesting read. It seems to me that the issues to do with field strength vs distance are quite applicable to a ham antenna as the radiator. The report is at http://www.ntia.doc.gov/osmhome/repo...7/bpl2007.html . Owen |
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