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Jack Twilley wrote:
So who actually has the space and resources to set up an ideal horizontal dipole on HF with the full length and height as specified in all the formulas? Wouldn't it be cheaper and easier to set up a vertical if you could install something that high off the ground? The only thing I've seen personally that looks like it meets the ideal is a small station tucked into the northeast cloverleaf of an exit off Interstate 93 near Boston, MA, and the station appeared to be a marker for Logan. Anyone have any personal, real-life experience with a full-size, full-height HF dipole? Is it worth the cost? Jack. - -- Interesting question. I have seen the dipoles used for HF communications with transatlantic air traffic from Gander, or at least one site which IIRC was the receiver site. Since this, and similar installations around the world, need reliable communications at a number of frequencies to provide coverage over a wide area and while they may have a kilowatt or so for transmit; on receive they are working with a station whose transmitter is unlikely to exceed 400W PEP and whose antenna is at best a poor compromise since the days of aircraft wire antennas are long gone. I don't know about other sites, but Gander certainly used to have a number of just plain old dipoles; and I have seen other simple dipoles at several other airports and airline installations so one would expect a fair amount of operational data to have been gathered over the years. It seems to me that most of the professional vertical installations I have seen are those which tend to require operation at multiple frequencies with a single antenna - i.e. shipboard and military installations, although there used to be quite a lot of verticals at Coast Guard stations for the 2 MHz band. Re. the installation at Logan; I would be inclined to believe that what you are seeing is a top loaded "T" configuration for a Low Frequency (200 - 400kHz) Non-Directional-Beacon. Dave |
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