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![]() You might be mixing dc-theory with rf, and looking for a particular relationship that's not there. The antenna is not 100' higher electrically as you suggest. In terms of your 100' ground rod, just because it might take that deep a hole to achieve say, 5 ohms dc-resistance, that does not make the surface or an antenna above it at an elevated potential with respect to each other. A dipole certainly behaves differently over varying resistances of soils. But the efficiency differences have never been equivalent to the antenna being at a different elevation because of soil conditions. Now maybe I get away with less ground loss from a half-wave dipole that is not quite a half-wave above ground, because my soil is very sandy, is that what you meant? It doesn't change the electrical height of my antenna any, but the soil is such a lousy conductor that less is absorbed by a slightly too-low antenna. Jack You're probably right - but then why does the operator on the hill get better recption than the one in the valley. if sand is an insulator, then being on top of a 100-ft pile of sand would be like at the topp of a glass tower, right? why not? |
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