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Frnak McKenney wrote:
. . . Okay... ARRL Antennas, Chapter 8: Multielement Arrays. We've got an (approximately, given skip) vertically-polarized 10MHz signal, so the E-field is moving up and down and the wavefront is a circular ripple (nearly a straight line by the time it gets to Richmond) travelling roughly west-to-east, that is, it's hitting my house end-on. . . . I definitely think I'm missing something, but then, I haven't really made it that far into the Antenna Handbook. While you're looking at the ARRL Antenna Book, look over the chapter on propagation. You'll find that when receiving a signal by ionospheric skip (as you are), the polarization will be randomly oriented. So there's no point in choosing your antenna orientation on the basis of some supposed wave polarization. Its orientation will, however, have a striking impact on its pattern, so you should choose the orientation to get the most favorable pattern. The fading in and out of the WWV signal you described in an earlier posting is very likely due largely or at least partially to polarization shift -- the signal fades when the polarization rotates to be crosswise to your antenna, and gets loud when the polarization lines up with your antenna's. I've seen tens of dB difference switching between a vertically and horizontally polarized antenna, with the change going the other way after a minute or so when the polarization rotates. If your receiver needs a constantly strong signal, you're going to have a hard time getting it what it needs. I haven't followed the thread closely, so please pardon me if I've missed something. Your initial description of the problem sounded like receiver overload. A sharp preselector would help a lot, although it sounded like you were using a tuned loop which, if carefully balanced, should provide that function. If a preselector isn't enough, the next step is to add an attenuator -- I have to use one between my TV and its antenna, in fact. You should consider the possibility that the 10 MHz WWV signal itself is overloading the receiver, in which case an attenuator is necessary, and the last thing you'd want to do is use a better antenna. A directional antenna can be used to reduce the strength of interfering signals if they're coming from directions different than WWV. But making an antenna which has good rejection in the right directions can be something of a project. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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