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Previously, about BL&E's 1937 measurements:
Their calculation of the field at the receiving site when the radial system is perfect was adjusted for the effect of ground wave attenuation caused by the imperfect ground conductivity. Anybody: Just wondering -- how does this conclusion flow from the findings published in the 1937 I.R.E.paper of BL&E? The theoretical (not measured) BL&E groundwave field at 1 mile for 1 kW radiated from a perfect monopole over a perfect ground plane as shown in the BL&E I.R.E. paper is not the equivalent/adjusted field they measured from the monopole heights they tested. But, as BL&E published, the groundwave fields they measured from these real monopoles over real earth was within several percent of that theoretical maximum, when working against 113 buried radials each of 0.41WL -- even for the poor conductivity at/near their antenna site. Also, I'm speaking of sky wave. Ground reflection isn't a factor in determining surface wave, ... But neither theory nor practice supports this, does it? If so, then the groundwave fields that BL&E measured at 3/10 of a mile would have been at least 29.3% less than that theoretical maximum field, which included a perfect (3 dB) ground reflection -- not just the several percent they measured. And this measured performance just beyond the near field radius has been re-proven in thousands of groundwave r.m.s. field strength measurements of AM broadcast stations over many decades since the BL&E work. It would be a mistake to design HF antenna systems based on optimizing surface wave propagation as AM broadcasters do, unless you desire communication for distances not exceeding a few miles. Just to note that since the 1930s (at least), AM broadcasters have been aware of the effects of the differing propagation characteristics of groundwaves and skywaves. This is evident in the fact that most 50 kW, fulltime, AM broadcast stations in the US use a radiator height that minimizes the self-interference of their skywave with their groundwave, so as to ~maximize their interference-free coverage areas when skywave propagation occurs. The great majority of these stations use a monopole radiator height of about 195 degrees. RF |
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