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#1
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Precipitation static, eg., from highly charged raindrops and fine snow
or fine sand, impinging on the antenna wire, just causes an increase in receiver white noise level. It can be reduced but not removed by using a very thickly insulated antenna wire, like the inner conductor of a coaxial cable complete with its polyethylene jacket. ---- Reg. |
#2
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![]() Reg Edwards wrote: Precipitation static, eg., from highly charged raindrops and fine snow or fine sand, impinging on the antenna wire, just causes an increase in receiver white noise level. It can be reduced but not removed by using a very thickly insulated antenna wire, like the inner conductor of a coaxial cable complete with its polyethylene jacket. ---- Reg. I've never seen a case of precitation static occuring that way. In every single case I've seen, whether on tall buildings, tall towers, or antenna hear earth, it has always been corona discharges from the antenna or objects near the antenna. How do I know this? 1.) I had side by side "insulated" and "unisulated" Beverage antenna wires that are otherwide identical except for being spaced a few dozen feet apart, and the antebnna pointed towards my tall towers had precip static and the others did not. Both were equal in noise despite the fact they are hit by the same rain or dust. 2.) I have Yagis on towers that are identical, and the LOWER antenna almost never has precipitation static despite the fact they are hit by the same rain or dust. 3.) I've had dipoles at various heights, and the lower dipole always has much less precipitation staic than the high dipole despite the fact they get the same rain or dust. 4.) The period of the noise has nothing at all to do with the number of droplets hitting the antenna. It increases in pitch as the charge gradient between earth and clouds builds, then when lightning flashes it immediatly stops without time delay. 5.) On tall buildings on dark nights in storms, we could actually hear the same pitch noise as the repeaters rebroadcast, and walk to the noise source and actually see the corona. 6.) Antennas in fiberglass radomes were no quieter than bare metal dipoles on tall buildings. 7.) I even used an electrostatic sprayer to charge droplets and hit an antenna, and could only simulate noise when the antenna element had a sharp point and I got near the sharp point...at which time I could see faint corona. 73 Tom |
#3
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Dear Tom:
Your message may one of the most interesting and unexpected that I have read in a long time. Some comments follow. Please note my extreme reluctance to engage in anything but a calm exchange of experiences and opinions. I have no interest in provoking you. Your experience does not seem to agree with experience at remote, flat, treeless sites here in Michigan. Please note the qualifiers in the last sentence. Especially in the UP of Michigan, at certain times of the year, P-noise is the major factor in limiting radio use. P-noise is not found on an antenna imbedded in a clump of trees when an antenna out in the open (many wavelengths from the first antenna) has P-noise. The follow-on is that since most sites are urban or suburban, few radio amateurs will experience P-noise. P-noise is observed when there is no rain nor thunderstorms, but plenty of wind. This is suggestive of moving charge discharging into the antenna. Of course, one could define this action as being "corona." Of course, if one places enough charge on a piece of metal eventually there will be "corona." Many antennas have a conductive path to earth that makes such an accumulation of charge unlikely. There is no doubt that an antenna experiencing P-noise will radiate and thus noise will be received by nearby antennas. That is why successful receiving antennas here in the flatland are placed a long distance from metallic objects. Most people have never heard P-noise because their site precludes same. A paper published in August about 1961 (IEEE Vehicular Transactions) is one of the few references that has been published that deals with means for reducing P-noise. The article involved a fixed, not mobile, antenna. It appears that additional work has not been published that deals significantly with fixed antennas. (Lots of papers exist dealing with aircraft antennas.) Your #6 is interesting. Unfortunately, there is so much radiation from what else is on a tall building that it is difficult to sort out where excess noise is coming from. An antenna inside of a slightly conductive radome that is placed a long distance from anything that could radiate might be different. Your #7 is especially interesting. Our EMC group has on the drawing board just such experimentation. We will be on the lookout for "end effects." Your note is a valuable observation. Regards, Mac N8TT -- J. Mc Laughlin; Michigan U.S.A. Home: wrote in message ups.com... Reg Edwards wrote: Precipitation static, eg., from highly charged raindrops and fine snow or fine sand, impinging on the antenna wire, just causes an increase in receiver white noise level. It can be reduced but not removed by using a very thickly insulated antenna wire, like the inner conductor of a coaxial cable complete with its polyethylene jacket. ---- Reg. I've never seen a case of precitation static occuring that way. In every single case I've seen, whether on tall buildings, tall towers, or antenna hear earth, it has always been corona discharges from the antenna or objects near the antenna. How do I know this? 1.) I had side by side "insulated" and "unisulated" Beverage antenna wires that are otherwide identical except for being spaced a few dozen feet apart, and the antebnna pointed towards my tall towers had precip static and the others did not. Both were equal in noise despite the fact they are hit by the same rain or dust. 2.) I have Yagis on towers that are identical, and the LOWER antenna almost never has precipitation static despite the fact they are hit by the same rain or dust. 3.) I've had dipoles at various heights, and the lower dipole always has much less precipitation staic than the high dipole despite the fact they get the same rain or dust. 4.) The period of the noise has nothing at all to do with the number of droplets hitting the antenna. It increases in pitch as the charge gradient between earth and clouds builds, then when lightning flashes it immediatly stops without time delay. 5.) On tall buildings on dark nights in storms, we could actually hear the same pitch noise as the repeaters rebroadcast, and walk to the noise source and actually see the corona. 6.) Antennas in fiberglass radomes were no quieter than bare metal dipoles on tall buildings. 7.) I even used an electrostatic sprayer to charge droplets and hit an antenna, and could only simulate noise when the antenna element had a sharp point and I got near the sharp point...at which time I could see faint corona. 73 Tom |
#4
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J. Mc Laughlin wrote:
P-noise is not found on an antenna imbedded in a clump of trees when an antenna out in the open (many wavelengths from the first antenna) has P-noise. The follow-on is that since most sites are urban or suburban, few radio amateurs will experience P-noise. That does not disagree with anything I said. A lower antenna surrounded by taller objects is not subject to the same high voltage gradient as an antenna out in a flat clear field. P-noise is observed when there is no rain nor thunderstorms, but plenty of wind. This is suggestive of moving charge discharging into the antenna. So how does it get there? How does it build up? Where is the spark arc or sizzle? Of course, one could define this action as being "corona." Of course, if one places enough charge on a piece of metal eventually there will be "corona." Many antennas have a conductive path to earth that makes such an accumulation of charge unlikely. The fact is grounded or ungrounded antennas all behave the very same way. Ask anyone who has yagis on towers. It is a potential difference between earth and the atmosphere around the antenna. It isn't the antenna charging up so much differently than earth. It is the difference in potential between the antenna and the space around the antenna. Remember those old tall mast wooden sailing ships soaked with sal****er and the fire off the yardarms at night? Your #6 is interesting. Unfortunately, there is so much radiation from what else is on a tall building that it is difficult to sort out where excess noise is coming from. An antenna inside of a slightly conductive radome that is placed a long distance from anything that could radiate might be different. You can walk right up to the noise source, and even see the corona at night. It's very easy to take a FSM with audio monitor or AM receiver with S meter and walk the roof for strongest noise, and it will generally take you right to the tallest sharpest object (grounded or not) on the roof. The last place you want to be is the tallest antenna on the building. Get high winds or inclement weather and you will be destined for noise....grounded antenna or not. We serviced dozens of repeaters and a few STL or Remote links in the 70's, it was a pattern that repeated. I have a suggestion. Go to a forum where there are many people with antennas at various heights, like a contesting reflector. Ask people who have similar or identical antennas at various heights on a single tall tower what they observe during high winds, nasty weather, or rain. The very same wind and the very same moisture is impacting all of the antennas, but without fail they will tell you the lower antennas are always much better and the taller antennas are the first to go. If the P-staic is actually coming from the particles or moisture in air striking the antenna, and if the same basic sample of weather is at all the antennas, why are the upper antennas affected more? If it is the conductor charging, why do plumber's delight antennas or folded elements with grounded centers have the same noise as insulated elements? If it is moisture or particles striking the antenna causing the problem, why is an insulated antenna with a single sharp protrusion just as noisey as a bare antenna? Why doesn't the noise follow the pattern of the particle rate, and why does it occur (as you even seemed to say) when there is no actual precipitation? Since I've always had towers taller than 100 feet, and since I've worked on VHF and UHF systems that had to stay up during storms, I've spent a lot of time looking at this. I've not found anything that points to the antenna charging differently than earth or being struck by charged particles. 73 Tom |
#6
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Cecil Moore wrote:
wrote: J. Mc Laughlin wrote: P-noise is observed when there is no rain nor thunderstorms, but plenty of wind. This is suggestive of moving charge discharging into the antenna. So how does it get there? How does it build up? Where is the spark arc or sizzle? This is a well known phenomenon in Arizona. What else, besides charged dust particles, could cause arcing at coax connectors on a perfectly clear windy day? A large scale demo of this effect can be seen during volcanic eruptions, when large amounts of dust are thrown into the atmosphere at high speeds. Lightning happens. http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/featu...368962,00.html It is not certainty, but particles rubbing against each other do a pretty good job of building up static. - 73 de Mike KB3EIA - |
#7
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![]() "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... Cecil Moore wrote: wrote: J. Mc Laughlin wrote: P-noise is observed when there is no rain nor thunderstorms, but plenty of wind. This is suggestive of moving charge discharging into the antenna. So how does it get there? How does it build up? Where is the spark arc or sizzle? This is a well known phenomenon in Arizona. What else, besides charged dust particles, could cause arcing at coax connectors on a perfectly clear windy day? A large scale demo of this effect can be seen during volcanic eruptions, when large amounts of dust are thrown into the atmosphere at high speeds. Lightning happens. http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/featu...368962,00.html It is not certainty, but particles rubbing against each other do a pretty good job of building up static. - 73 de Mike KB3EIA - perfect example. a large scale dry example of colliding dust particles building an electric field, without need for them hitting a metalic conductor. dust particles pick up charge by bouncing off each other and the ground, there can actually be quite a high electric field built up. |
#8
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Dear Tom:
It appears that two noise mechanisms exist. The two are P-noise and corona noise. A receiver will experience close to white noise in both cases. However, corona noise tends to be accompanied by sudden stops and starts and P-noise starts with a sequence of perceptibly time spaced pops that increase in rate. If there is corona off of the top of a structure then it is reasonable to expect the antennas most close to the corona will "hear" more noise than the antennas that are farther away (such as below). It is also to be expected that moving charged particles that are higher above the ground will carry more charge on the average than charged particles that are moving near the ground. Depending on the wind and gradient, I expect that there is a height below which few charged particles are found when higher above ground charged particles are common. In short: If one can see corona, it will be the dominate noise source. If the gradient with altitude is not sufficient for corona, and weather conditions are such that moving charged particles exist, then out in the open the higher antennas are expected to have more discharges from moving charged particles per second and more noise than experienced by lower antennas. I have offered an alternative explanation for why, absent corona, higher antennas might well experience more noise. Actual precipitation (rain, snow, hail) is not needed for P-noise. Moving dust particles can carry charge and become charged. The noise does follow the "pattern of the particle rate." However, as you understand from other work, when the rate becomes high enough compared to the bandwidth of the receiver the result is essentially indistinguishable from white noise. Even with a 400 Hz bandwidth, the onset of P-noise is unique and comprises a sequence of pops that either die away or increase in rate to produce prodigious amounts of noise. I have used a time blanking circuit - noise clipper - and find that it is effective at lower rates. Corona noise does not seem to have the same temporal characteristics. A moving charged particle is able to discharge into an insulated conductor with aplomb. It is the very-close-to-the-antenna sudden accelerations of charge that produce noise (radio waves). What has shown promise is the use of slightly conductive coverings. The theory is that the amplitude of the pop will be reduced because the rate of charge transfer will be slowed. UV resistant materials that are easy to apply and that are not expensive seem not to exist. Obviously, too much conductivity would be ineffective. Absent actual corona, a noise mechanism is contended that comprises the sudden transfer of some or all of the charge on a moving charged particle (that occurs naturally) into an antenna's structure, support or even into insulation around same. A near optimum, HF, DX, low-noise receiving antenna is a small, horizontal, unturned loop antenna with an amplifier that is mounted on a wood pole having no metal inserts. The pole is some 200 meters from any exposed metal. The coax that runs up the pole to the amplifier is encased in conductive, plastic conduit as is the loop's wire. This antenna has close to a null at the zenith and is omnidirectional in azimuth. It is contended that what I have observed is not in conflict with what you have observed with corona discharges. 73 Mac N8TT P.S. Some months ago you asked about V antennas for low HF or MF use involving a 300 foot tower. I found that an interesting topic and did some analysis, which I tried to sent to you. Unfortunately, the E-mail address did not work. My conclusion, was, as well as I am able to remember, the same as yours: at the low frequencies involved, the effort did not have a reasonable pay-back. -- J. Mc Laughlin; Michigan U.S.A. Home: wrote in message oups.com... J. Mc Laughlin wrote: P-noise is not found on an antenna imbedded in a clump of trees when an antenna out in the open (many wavelengths from the first antenna) has P-noise. The follow-on is that since most sites are urban or suburban, few radio amateurs will experience P-noise. That does not disagree with anything I said. A lower antenna surrounded by taller objects is not subject to the same high voltage gradient as an antenna out in a flat clear field. P-noise is observed when there is no rain nor thunderstorms, but plenty of wind. This is suggestive of moving charge discharging into the antenna. So how does it get there? How does it build up? Where is the spark arc or sizzle? Of course, one could define this action as being "corona." Of course, if one places enough charge on a piece of metal eventually there will be "corona." Many antennas have a conductive path to earth that makes such an accumulation of charge unlikely. The fact is grounded or ungrounded antennas all behave the very same way. Ask anyone who has yagis on towers. It is a potential difference between earth and the atmosphere around the antenna. It isn't the antenna charging up so much differently than earth. It is the difference in potential between the antenna and the space around the antenna. Remember those old tall mast wooden sailing ships soaked with sal****er and the fire off the yardarms at night? Your #6 is interesting. Unfortunately, there is so much radiation from what else is on a tall building that it is difficult to sort out where excess noise is coming from. An antenna inside of a slightly conductive radome that is placed a long distance from anything that could radiate might be different. You can walk right up to the noise source, and even see the corona at night. It's very easy to take a FSM with audio monitor or AM receiver with S meter and walk the roof for strongest noise, and it will generally take you right to the tallest sharpest object (grounded or not) on the roof. The last place you want to be is the tallest antenna on the building. Get high winds or inclement weather and you will be destined for noise....grounded antenna or not. We serviced dozens of repeaters and a few STL or Remote links in the 70's, it was a pattern that repeated. I have a suggestion. Go to a forum where there are many people with antennas at various heights, like a contesting reflector. Ask people who have similar or identical antennas at various heights on a single tall tower what they observe during high winds, nasty weather, or rain. The very same wind and the very same moisture is impacting all of the antennas, but without fail they will tell you the lower antennas are always much better and the taller antennas are the first to go. If the P-staic is actually coming from the particles or moisture in air striking the antenna, and if the same basic sample of weather is at all the antennas, why are the upper antennas affected more? If it is the conductor charging, why do plumber's delight antennas or folded elements with grounded centers have the same noise as insulated elements? If it is moisture or particles striking the antenna causing the problem, why is an insulated antenna with a single sharp protrusion just as noisey as a bare antenna? Why doesn't the noise follow the pattern of the particle rate, and why does it occur (as you even seemed to say) when there is no actual precipitation? Since I've always had towers taller than 100 feet, and since I've worked on VHF and UHF systems that had to stay up during storms, I've spent a lot of time looking at this. I've not found anything that points to the antenna charging differently than earth or being struck by charged particles. 73 Tom |
#9
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J. Mc Laughlin wrote:
It appears that two noise mechanisms exist. The two are P-noise and corona noise. A receiver will experience close to white noise in both cases. However, corona noise tends to be accompanied by sudden stops and starts and P-noise starts with a sequence of perceptibly time spaced pops that increase in rate. Pops are caused by something charging and flashing over. All it takes to eliminate pops is a leak resistance or a leak choke slow enough to keep the antenna from charging. I've never heard the slow popping noise called P-static by anyone I know, but that doesn't say some people don't call it that. I have dipole high in the air, and on a clear day with a fair breeze they will knock someone right on their butt if the feeder is unhooked and the antenna allowed to charge. It does that dust or no dust, although nasty weather seems to greatly increase charge rate. It's easy to see why that happens. http://www.who.int/peh-emf/publicati...d_Exposure.pdf There is a significant electric field as we increase height even in fair weather. Even though that is a very high impedance field, it doesn't take air movement to charge a high conductor that is well-insulated. I have offered an alternative explanation for why, absent corona, higher antennas might well experience more noise. True, but a height change of just a few meters on a building or tower hundreds of meters tall makes a big difference as do sharp compared to blunt points on an antenna. During a rainstorm, when most people complain about corona, droplets from the very same sources are hitting lower and upper antennas. The noise does NOT follow the pattern or rate of raindrops hitting the antenna, and the upper antenna is always significantly noisier than the lower antenna. Actual precipitation (rain, snow, hail) is not needed for P-noise. Of course not. It is a voltage gradient problem. Moving dust particles can carry charge and become charged. The noise does follow the "pattern of the particle rate." I've never seen it do that. But I'll keep watching for it. P.S. Some months ago you asked about V antennas for low HF or MF use involving a 300 foot tower. I found that an interesting topic and did some analysis, which I tried to sent to you. Unfortunately, the E-mail address did not work. That's because the email address listed by Google for me is a dead address. If it was live, it would be useless with spam and virus. 73 Tom |
#10
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Dear Tom:
Thank you for your ideas and the reference. Let us leave it that we see things differently. Readers have the ability to learn from contrasting each of our viewpoints. I have always included my E-mail address in my communications. I must to bed - tomorrow is the last lab day of the semester and I anticipate many questions directed to the proximate final exams. 73, Mac N8TT -- J. Mc Laughlin; Michigan U.S.A. Home: wrote in message ups.com... J. Mc Laughlin wrote: It appears that two noise mechanisms exist. The two are P-noise and corona noise. A receiver will experience close to white noise in both cases. However, corona noise tends to be accompanied by sudden stops and starts and P-noise starts with a sequence of perceptibly time spaced pops that increase in rate. Pops are caused by something charging and flashing over. All it takes to eliminate pops is a leak resistance or a leak choke slow enough to keep the antenna from charging. I've never heard the slow popping noise called P-static by anyone I know, but that doesn't say some people don't call it that. I have dipole high in the air, and on a clear day with a fair breeze they will knock someone right on their butt if the feeder is unhooked and the antenna allowed to charge. It does that dust or no dust, although nasty weather seems to greatly increase charge rate. It's easy to see why that happens. http://www.who.int/peh-emf/publicati...d_Exposure.pdf There is a significant electric field as we increase height even in fair weather. Even though that is a very high impedance field, it doesn't take air movement to charge a high conductor that is well-insulated. I have offered an alternative explanation for why, absent corona, higher antennas might well experience more noise. True, but a height change of just a few meters on a building or tower hundreds of meters tall makes a big difference as do sharp compared to blunt points on an antenna. During a rainstorm, when most people complain about corona, droplets from the very same sources are hitting lower and upper antennas. The noise does NOT follow the pattern or rate of raindrops hitting the antenna, and the upper antenna is always significantly noisier than the lower antenna. Actual precipitation (rain, snow, hail) is not needed for P-noise. Of course not. It is a voltage gradient problem. Moving dust particles can carry charge and become charged. The noise does follow the "pattern of the particle rate." I've never seen it do that. But I'll keep watching for it. P.S. Some months ago you asked about V antennas for low HF or MF use involving a 300 foot tower. I found that an interesting topic and did some analysis, which I tried to sent to you. Unfortunately, the E-mail address did not work. That's because the email address listed by Google for me is a dead address. If it was live, it would be useless with spam and virus. 73 Tom |
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