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Dave Pitzer wrote:
"WABC (New York City) comes in poorly at night even though its xmtter is only 80 miles away." 80 miles is within groundwave range of WABC. 770 KHz should reach that far in the daylight hours as well as at night. At night, the ionosphere reconfigures allowing a reflected wave from the station to reach your receiver. While the groundwave is subject to ittle if any variation, the skywave is subject to many variations. Thats just the beginning of the problem. All U.S. stations share their assignments with other stations operating on the same frequencies. If the desired station is not interfered between its own groundwave and skywave (you are out of groundwave range) it is still likely to be interfered by other stations sharing its frequency or even interfered by adjacent channel stations. When these undesired stations fade in, they can suppress reception of the desired station by taking over the receiver`s automatic gain control circuit. To accomodate multiple assignments on a single carrier frequency, FCC often requires new assignees to include a null toward one or more aditional existing stations, especially at night, in the new station`s radiation pattern. If the reduction in potential interference is deemed insufficient, the new station may be required to reduce power as well as switch directional patterns during nighttime hours. The new station may be the oldest station on the frequency if it has decided to relocate or make some other modification to its license terms. So, WABC may have directional coverage of its area which it switches at nightfall and daybreak. I have an FCC book showing all the assignments but it is very out of date. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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