Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
John Smith wrote:
"The big boys use 4 dishes for a link." Yes. It is for space diversity which dramatically improves reliability on many paths. Paths tend to fade independently when they are significantly separated, say by 10 wavelengths. More than just 2 antennas at a path end is required for diversity reception. Separate receivers are required too. Two dishes connected together just make an antenna array. If both receive the same signal, it is probable a time will come when the signal sum is zero even though either signal is usable. Two receivers or more must be used for space diversity reception. A special combiner must be used to select the best signal and reject all others. Individual receivers are connected with individual antennas and selection is made from among the receiver outputs. All other receiver outputs are completely rejected. The shortwave broadcaster I worked for in the 1950`s relayed its programs via HF radio. There were 3 rhombic receiving antennas, separated by about 10 wavelengths broadside, at the lowest frequency. This was repeated for each reception direction. Each rhombic fed its own multicoupler in the receiving station. A receiver for each frequency being received was connected with an output from a multicoupler.The receivers were all Hammarlund SP-600`s. Three receiver outputs, representing signals from each of three antennas were fed to a "triple diversity combiner" (Crosby or Pioneer). The combiner selscted the best of the three signals and rejected all others. This is a triple diversity reception, "TDR System". In the 1960`s, I built a diversity microwave system into the Gulf of Mexico from onshore. Water can often reflect well enough for complete signal cancellation at microwave frequencies, so I used space diversity, two dishes vertically separated on the towers, feeding separate receivers at each path end. Only one transmitter at each end of a path operates at a time., but both receivers work with a combiner which functions like that used at HF for the TDR. Output is a video type spectrum rather than audio output as from the TDR combiner. The video combiner picks the better of the two received demodiulated microwave signals and rejects the poorer signal. It works like Gangbusters. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Antenna radiated spurs | Antenna | |||
FS: MOTOROLA VHF SPECTRUM ANTENNA | Antenna | |||
FS: VHF Motorola Spectrum mobile antenna in MA | Antenna |