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Richard Fry wrote:
"Roy Lewallen" wrote A head-on reflection to a flat surface results in the polarization sense reversal you mention. But reflection at a shallow angle doesn't. (etc) __________ Thanks for the reply. I was recalling the experimental results that RCA gathered in fixed and mobile tests in the Chicago loop when Ch 7 (ABC) installed an RCA c-pol transmit antenna on Sears Tower there in the 1970s. The ghost-reduction for same-sense c-pol tx and rx antennas was clearly evident, and quite remarkable. The link below leads to a scan of several graphs showing why this was true for those near-in tests. RCA published a paper about it, which I will try to find and provide a link. http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h8...eflections.jpg Sorry, I can't get enough out of these graphs to come to any conclusions. But the equations for reflection coefficient as a function of polarization and ground conductivity and permittivity are well known (cf. Kraus, _Antennas_) and are used by NEC-2 and EZNEC. So conclusions based on reflection coefficients should be the same. Perhaps the multipath reflections involved in TV broadcasting are primarily from surfaces more or less normal to the radiated signal. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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