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Owen wrote:
BTW, 5 to 10 degrees elevation is probably below most propagation paths for DX, let alone local contacts. Lowest angle doesn't necessarily translate to optimal for distant stations (it depends on the propagation mechanism at the time), and the most desirable DX might not be at the greatest distance. Best performance at low angles might assure maximum pickup of local noise sources, and in my case QRM because I am not at all interested in DX. Recent editions of the ARRL Antenna Book cover this topic very thoroughly. They note that arrival angles from a given location vary with time of day, time of year, time in the sunspot cycle, whether the ionosphere is stable or disturbed, and so on... Then they produce statistics for major paths (eg "G-VK"), averaged over all these factors. OK, so these figues are "only computed"... but they are computed using VOACAP (the Voice of America's propagation program that has has years of development and a lot of verification) so this is the best information we're ever likely to get. The big lesson is that there is ALWAYS A SPREAD OF POSSIBLE ANGLES. As Owen says, 5-10deg is not always the most likely angle. It all depends on how many F2/F1/E hops will fit into the required path length. That means the arrival angles tend to jump, especially as the band is coming on or going out. (However, it turns out that a substantial fraction of signals on the G-VK path come in at angles of only a degree or two. These paths are workable, of course, but the antennas at both ends will usually have very little gain unless the land slopes down to lower the reflection angle.) Hams became fixated on "5 to 10 degrees" a very long time ago, and we still tend to wave this figure around like some kind of flash-card. Professionals have moved on to a much better understanding of the range of possible angles that they need, and this is now starting to filter into ham radio too. If anyone is interested in this subject and hasn't read a recent edition of the ARRL Antenna Book, it's time for an update. -- 73 from Ian GM3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
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