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#1
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I visited this website
http://www.icom.co.jp/world/products/marine/index.htm trying to find out what is the distance that IC-M710 can communicate. I guess the answer is it depends, can anyone tell me what is the typical distance I can expect this unit capable of. The website tells me "A full 150 W (PEP) of output power is available for reliable long distance communication" but how long is long, really. Thank you, |
#2
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From the ICOM website -- the IC-M710
a.. Covers all allowed bands between 1.6 and 27.5 MHz a.. But propagation varies on each band depending on night or day, time of year, time in the sunspot cycle, solar storms, ground wave propagation, etc. Suggest you read about propagation. See URL: http://www.ae4rv.com/tn/propflash.htm Hope that helps. CL "Newbie" wrote in message ups.com... I visited this website http://www.icom.co.jp/world/products/marine/index.htm trying to find out what is the distance that IC-M710 can communicate. I guess the answer is it depends, can anyone tell me what is the typical distance I can expect this unit capable of. The website tells me "A full 150 W (PEP) of output power is available for reliable long distance communication" but how long is long, really. Thank you, |
#3
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![]() Caveat Lector wrote: From the ICOM website -- the IC-M710 a.. Covers all allowed bands between 1.6 and 27.5 MHz a.. But propagation varies on each band depending on night or day, time of year, time in the sunspot cycle, solar storms, ground wave propagation, etc. Suggest you read about propagation. See URL: http://www.ae4rv.com/tn/propflash.htm Hope that helps. CL Thank you Caveat. When VOA or BBC plan to build a radio station, they must be able to calculate the coverage of their station in 'normal' conditions. When we talk about cars, you may say a Mercedes C200 speed depends on road conditions, tires pressure, gas, temperature, etc... but surely people can say it can do 100km/hr. Don't we have something similar when talking about radios ? |
#4
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In article .com,
"Newbie" wrote: Caveat Lector wrote: From the ICOM website -- the IC-M710 a.. Covers all allowed bands between 1.6 and 27.5 MHz a.. But propagation varies on each band depending on night or day, time of year, time in the sunspot cycle, solar storms, ground wave propagation, etc. Suggest you read about propagation. See URL: http://www.ae4rv.com/tn/propflash.htm Hope that helps. CL Thank you Caveat. When VOA or BBC plan to build a radio station, they must be able to calculate the coverage of their station in 'normal' conditions. When we talk about cars, you may say a Mercedes C200 speed depends on road conditions, tires pressure, gas, temperature, etc... but surely people can say it can do 100km/hr. Don't we have something similar when talking about radios ? The problem with your analogy is that there are no "Normal" conditions when it come to RF Propagation. One could "Generalize" that Ground Wave Communications in the 2-3 Mhz Marine Bands is 100-300 miles, for a 150 watt Transmit signal and no local Receiver noise. BUT that would be a VERY BIG Generalization and your milage WILL vary with all the previously posted conditional changes. Another generalization would be that the higher the frequency the shorter the Ground Wave Propagation. Again, that is a Gross Generalization, and if you used that to determine what frequency to use for an y particular communications path, you will not communicate 50% of the time. Modern MF/HF System use ALE to determine what bands are open for any two stations. This is done by having each radio send breif test transmissions on specific frequencies in each Band at specific times, and allowing the ALE software to select the best SNR for each band at the distance between the two stations. This is very expensive equipment, and not common in Marine Communications, but very common in Military Communications. After you spend some time on the bands, communicating between specific locations, at various times of the day, and year, and thru various SunSpot cycles, you will get better at determining what will work and what is a waste of time. This is where MF/HF Commincations is more an ART, and not a Science. Bruce in alaska Long time Marine Radioman, in the North Pacific..... -- add a 2 before @ |
#5
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![]() "Newbie" wrote in message oups.com... Caveat Lector wrote: From the ICOM website -- the IC-M710 a.. Covers all allowed bands between 1.6 and 27.5 MHz a.. But propagation varies on each band depending on night or day, time of year, time in the sunspot cycle, solar storms, ground wave propagation, etc. Suggest you read about propagation. See URL: http://www.ae4rv.com/tn/propflash.htm Hope that helps. CL Thank you Caveat. When VOA or BBC plan to build a radio station, they must be able to calculate the coverage of their station in 'normal' conditions. The VOA and BBC transmit on several frequencies to have coverage because of the varing propagation. When we talk about cars, you may say a Mercedes C200 speed depends on road conditions, tires pressure, gas, temperature, etc... but surely people can say it can do 100km/hr. Don't we have something similar when talking about radios ? Not really, take AM Broadcast stations. During the day they cover a small area. At night, this area is increased quite a bit. From wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AM_radi...ns_of_AM_radio Medium wave and short wave radio signals act differently during daytime and nighttime. During the day, AM signals travel by groundwave, diffracting around the curve of the earth over a distance up to a few hundred miles (or kilometers) from the signal transmitter. However, after sunset, changes in the ionosphere cause AM signals to travel by skywave, enabling AM radio stations to be heard much farther from their point of origin than is normal during the day. This phenomenon can be easily observed by scanning an AM radio dial at night. As a result, many broadcast stations are required as a condition of license to reduce their broadcasting power significantly (or use directional antennas) after sunset, or even to suspend broadcasting entirely during nighttime hours. (Such stations are commonly referred to as daytimers.) In fact, at night during the winter time, big AM stations can be heard clear across the USA. Not so during the day. CL |
#6
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![]() "Newbie" wrote in message oups.com... Caveat Lector wrote: From the ICOM website -- the IC-M710 a.. Covers all allowed bands between 1.6 and 27.5 MHz a.. But propagation varies on each band depending on night or day, time of year, time in the sunspot cycle, solar storms, ground wave propagation, etc. Suggest you read about propagation. See URL: http://www.ae4rv.com/tn/propflash.htm Hope that helps. CL Thank you Caveat. When VOA or BBC plan to build a radio station, they must be able to calculate the coverage of their station in 'normal' conditions. When we talk about cars, you may say a Mercedes C200 speed depends on road conditions, tires pressure, gas, temperature, etc... but surely people can say it can do 100km/hr. Don't we have something similar when talking about radios ? There are modles that will give general predictions of how far the signals will travel. They will give predictions such as the coverage like 50 % of the time, 80 % of the time and so on. Outside of very local conditions such as out to 5 or 10 miles anything can hapen. Sort of like a river near here. Most of the time it is around 200 feet wide. I have seen it almost dry a couple of years ago. Think I could have jumped over it if it was not for the mud. It all depends on the frequency , the ionospheric conditions and black magic. It is more like the gas milage of a car, It depends on how it is driven and the state of the tuning. You can get a general idea, but not an exect value. |
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