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"Jim, K7JEB wrote"
Roy Lewallen wrote: An antenna pattern is a graph of relative signal strength versus angle. It's not a graph relating anything to distance, nor is it a graph of absolute field strength. What it tells you is how strong the signal is in each direction compared to some reference (0 dB). If you stay the same distance away from the antenna and walk around it in a circle, you'll see the field strengths vary as shown on the graph in the various azimuth directions. This will be true regardless of the distance you choose..... Good explanation, Roy. (I didn't want to quote the whole article) Just an additional comment. In the case of a plot of *electric field* intensity (in volts/meter) vs azimuth angle, usually applied to standard- broadcast AM stations, the radial distance on that plot does map directly into the distance at which a particular field strength can be received. .... An interesting program, called BCmap, illustrates this by overlaying a map of North America with the patterns of AM stations on a particular frequency, or set of frequencies. It may be downloaded free of charge _____________ To both posters above, note that the relative field, h-plane azimuth patterns for AM broadcast stations such as published on the FCC website and in the BCmap program are acceptably accurate only very close to the radiator(s) -- about 1 km or so. These are the net radiation patterns of such stations just beyond the near-field radius, where for such short paths, frequency and earth conductivity have relatively little affect on groundwave field intensity. Earth conductivity, earth curvature and frequency become very important for long groundwave paths, and those perfect relative field patterns no longer are a very good indicator of relative field intensities for such groundwaves. There are other websites that do take the applied r-f power and frequency, earth conductivity and earth curvature into account when calculating the distance to a given groundwave field intensity resulting from the h-plane ERP in each direction that is "launched" by an AM broadcast station. The link next below leads to a graphic showing three groundwave field-intensity contours for WJR, Detroit, which is a 50 kW, non-directional, fulltime station on 760 kHz, using a single, 195-degree monopole radiator. These groundwave field intensity pattern shapes would be perfect circles for values plotted ~ 1 km from the antenna site. But the more distant contours shown on this site are far from circular, as a function of the varying groundwave propagation conditions in various compass directions from the transmit antenna location. http://www.radio-locator.com/cgi-bin...atus=L&hours=U RF (WJR staff engineer, mid-1960s) http://rfry.org |
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