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Mark Keith, NM5K wrote:
"I`ve had horizontal antennas that picked up horrible amounts of noise." Yes, the protectection comes from noise beyond the line of sight range but not so far away as to require aky wave propagation. Propagation is a function of frequency. Below 100 KHz, gtound waves are little affected by the earth`s attenuation and the sky wave is reflected with little loss by the ionosphere. Waves travel up to 600 miles with little perturbation from the time of day, season, or year, but at greater distances, low frequency reception is better at night and in the winter due to ionospheric changes affecting the reflected signal.. On a yearly basis, signal strength over long distances correspond with the 11-year sunspot cycle. Low frequency signal strength changes only slowly without rapid fades which characterize high frequency operation. At frequencies above 100 KHz but below 535 KHz, ground wave attenuation is greater than at frequencies below 100 KHz. Daytime ionospheric losses are very high. Daytime ground wave propagation is better at the lower end of this frequency range and over soil of higher conductivity. Signals may extend to several hundred miles, where noise levels in the receiving location are low. Nighttime transmission to distant points is possible due to ionospheric reflection. Dependable daytime reception in the 100 to 535 KHz range is bad due to lack of ionospheric propagation and high attenuation of the ground wave especially at the higher frequency end of this band over poorly conductive earth and during the summer months when there may be thunder storms producing static eithin ground wave range.. At frequencies between 535 KHz and 1600 KHz, only the ground wave is useful in the daytime beyond the line of sight, as the sky wave is completely absorbed. The higher the frequency in this range, and the poorer the earrth`s conductivity,, the greater the attenuation of the ground wave. High powered transmitters at the lower frequencies in this range reach 50 to 100 miles over high conductivity soil. This may be pessimistic. I listen 24 hours to 50 KW KKYX in San Antonio which is 200 miles to my west satisfactorily. It broadcasts on 680 KHz. My receivers are quite ordinary and use internal loop antennas. The earth is highly conductive but there is no sea water in the path. At night, other stations produce low frequency carrier beats with KKYX causing undesirable automatic volume control action. but KKYX`s sky wave is stronger than its groundwave and its reception is still acceptable.. Radio Havana is one of its competitors. I hear all about "El Comandante" at times. Sky wave goes far in the 535 to 1600 KHz band. During Hurricane Carla in the 1960`s I listened to Dan Rather describe the storm blow by blow on KTRH, Houston`s 50 KW outlet, from Tierra del Fuego where I was working, and listening on a Hitachi pocket transistor portable radio with its built in loop antenna. The path is about 6000 miles long but mostly over the ocean. KTRH transmits on 740 KHz from the banks of Cedar Bayou. They have a 4-tower directionnal array with a North-South bias. Reception was good in Tierra fel Fuego as it is nearly at the Antarctic Circle and there are no thunder storms there. It is too cold. Groundwave extends hundreds of miles from KTRH, but not 6000 miles. My reception was shy wave using several hops.. Broadcast transmitters concentrate energy along the horizon so low elevation angles are favored.. This works well for sky wave DX, especially over the ocean. Sky wave attenuation in the 535 to 1600 KHz band is about the same throughout the band, so nighttime coverage of broadcast stations in this range is almost independent of frequency, while daytime ground waves favor the lower frequencies. When I was a kid, I had a crystal set fixed tuned to KTRH which directly drove a loudspeaker, if I could find a sensitive spot on the galena. I lived almost in sight of the station. At frequencies between 1600 KHz and 30 MHz, the ground wave attenuates so rapidly as to be usseless except over very short distances. Propagation is either line of sight or via ionospheric reflection or via tropospheric scattering. Frequencies above 30 MHz are often used for scattering ao that extremely high gain antennas are practical. Scatterihg often uses brute force to extend the range of signals beyond the line of sight. Most long-distance short-wave communications result from ionnospheric reflection. In the frequency range of 1600 KHz to 30 MH, a band of frequencies can almost always be found that provides communications by sky wave over a path between two points on earth. The maximum usable frequency depends on the distance between the points and ionospheric conditions. The minimum usable frequency depends on ionospheric conditions, effective radiated power, and the noise level at the receiver. Losses in the ionosphere increase with wavelength, so the frequency which gives the best signal is usually the maximum usable frequency. For communocations reliability, the maximum usable frequency is often discounted by 15% to provide an "Optimum Working Frequency". Daytime DX requires a high frequency. Shorter paths require lower frequencies. Typically 10 to 29 MHz during the day and 5 to 10 MHz, at night, are best for transmission over transoceanic distances (thousands of miles). Rember the Zenith portable? The best frequencies are usually higher during the day for long paths than they are at night Optimum frequency increases with the length of the path up to the maximum distance for one-hop transmission, about 1200 to 2400 miles. Low elevation-angle radiation such as 5 to 15 degrees is usually most desirable. Radiation below an angle of about 3.5 degrees may be absorbed by the earth near the transmitting antenna and wasted. Frequencies above 30 MHz are usually not reflected by the ionosphere and provide only sporadic sky wave communications. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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