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"Paul Burridge" wrote
A 1/4-wave shorted stub is used at frequencies as low as the MW broadcast band. The need there is to add a deep notch at stations whose 2nd harmonic falls in the broadcast band. This stub is used to add to the attenuation of the already compliant 2nd harmonic level coming out of the tx, but which, without the stub can be heard on broadcast receivers within a short distance from the broadcast antenna site. WJR (760 kHz) is one station using this technique. (RF quote) That just strikes me as plain stoopid. At MW, such filtering would be far better achieved by lumped elements. A quarter wave stub at such frequencies appears impractical, unwieldy and rather expensive! ____________ It also provides a low-impedance and fairly wideband path to ground for the insulated, series-fed tower used by most broadcast stations -- which drains off any static charges that may collect on the tower, and so reduces the probability of lightning strikes. Lumped elements are less effective at this. RF |
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