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Cecil,
I am no expert on the "legalese", but it appears the FCC has specified power in terms of Effective Radiated Power (ERP). The standard is no more than 50-watts radiated by a dipole in free space. My interpretation is that you look at the performance of your antenna at its maximum radiation point (i.e., the azimuth & elevation) and compare it to the radiation from a dipole in free space at its maximum radiation point(s). If your antenna has less radiated power than the dipole, then you can feed more power to the antenna (up to the point that you get the same radiation as a dipole in free space). I think this is the first time the FCC has used ERP (which includes antenna gain and feedline loss) as a power specification for amateur radio. Greg Queen AE6MF "Cecil Moore" wrote in message ... Zoran Brlecic wrote: http://www.arrl.org/FandES/field/reg...faq.html#three Wow, all sorts of ramifications. A one-wavelength dipole has about 3dB gain over a 1/2WL dipole so one must reduce one's power to 25 watts. OTOH, since a 1/2WL dipole over ground has about 6dB gain over a 1/4WL ground-mounted vertical, can one run 200 watts when using a 1/4WL vertical? -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP |
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