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Bill Turner wrote:
"Without more information, this comparison is flawed." I agree the information was incomplete. I dfid not reproduce the whole article. The fault was mine, not Phil`s. A low dipole has a high radiation angle. For comparison, Phil was working Airstream net stations in New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and New England. Phil was located in Ontario near Buffalo, New York when he collected his data. His in-laws lived there. Phil`s home QTH at the time was the highest spot in Western Connecticut, with a line-of-sight path to New York City. Phil had surrounded his mountain top with rhombic antennas pointed toward his likely targets. Amateurs answered when he called. In the Airstream net, most of the contacts were made Sundays on 3963 kHz at 8 am local time. Sky wave was mostly near vertical incidence. The low dipole was good for the job. Not too directional and a lot of radiation nearly straight up. Phil noted that several times when he switched to to the mobile whip, he could not be heard through the QRM. The numbers Phil put in Table 3 are only true under the conditions prevailing when he made the checks. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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