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"Dave Pitzer" wrote in message ... I have a CC Radio Plus (Sangean) AM/FM/TV/WX radio (from C. Crane Co.) I enjoy broadcasr band DX'ing and this radion does a super job with just it's built-in ferrite antenna. I have logged AM BC stations from practically every state east of the Mississippi. Best reception is, of course, at night. But.... for some reason WABC (New York City) comes in poorly at night even though it's xmitter is only 80 miles away. The signal fades to next to nothing and then increases to very loud but extremely distorted then will be loud and clear for a while. (During the day this station's signal is fine.) On the same evening, stations in Georgia (WSB, Atlanta), Illonois (WGN, Chicago), Michigan (WJR, Detroit), etc., etc. come in fine 90% of the time. Do I need an external antenna for the closer WABC????? Thanks, Dave Pitzer Pocono Lake, PA ======================== Thanks guys. All of these ideas make sense. It appears that I am just too *close* to this station to get decent nighttime reception --- just the opposite of the normal situation. There seems to be a relatively small band of distances within the xmitter's night pattern where the ground and sky signals alternately cancel and re-enforce each other on a random basis after local sunset. Thanks, Dave Pitzer =========================== |
On Thu, 08 Apr 2004 18:39:14 GMT, "Dave Pitzer"
wrote: Thanks guys. All of these ideas make sense. It appears that I am just too *close* to this station to get decent nighttime reception --- just the opposite of the normal situation. There seems to be a relatively small band of distances within the xmitter's night pattern where the ground and sky signals alternately cancel and re-enforce each other on a random basis after local sunset. Thanks, Dave Pitzer Hi Dave, Try a loop antenna turned/layed-over to reject the interfering sky/direct signal. Perhaps not a sure bet, but maybe 50-50. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
At LF and MF there is a distance from the transmitter at which the ground
wave and sky wave have roughly equal strengths. Distance varies throughout darkness. As the height of the reflecting layer varies the path length of the sky wave varies and so the relative phases of the ground and sky wave changes with time between being in-phase and out of phase with each other. The relative phases of carrier and sidebands are affected differently because of their different wavelengths. Carrier phase shift causes variation in signal strength. Sideband phase shift causes severe audio distortion. --- Reg. "Dave Pitzer" wrote in message ... "Dave Pitzer" wrote in message ... I have a CC Radio Plus (Sangean) AM/FM/TV/WX radio (from C. Crane Co.) I enjoy broadcasr band DX'ing and this radion does a super job with just it's built-in ferrite antenna. I have logged AM BC stations from practically every state east of the Mississippi. Best reception is, of course, at night. But.... for some reason WABC (New York City) comes in poorly at night even though it's xmitter is only 80 miles away. The signal fades to next to nothing and then increases to very loud but extremely distorted then will be loud and clear for a while. (During the day this station's signal is fine.) On the same evening, stations in Georgia (WSB, Atlanta), Illonois (WGN, Chicago), Michigan (WJR, Detroit), etc., etc. come in fine 90% of the time. Do I need an external antenna for the closer WABC????? Thanks, Dave Pitzer Pocono Lake, PA ======================== Thanks guys. All of these ideas make sense. It appears that I am just too *close* to this station to get decent nighttime reception --- just the opposite of the normal situation. There seems to be a relatively small band of distances within the xmitter's night pattern where the ground and sky signals alternately cancel and re-enforce each other on a random basis after local sunset. Thanks, Dave Pitzer =========================== |
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