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![]() "larry" wrote: The point is that once you have gotten away from the earths curvature, power on vhf and uhf has almost little meaning. That's not quite true. Yes, earth curvature is the big limiting factor for terrestrial communications. But in free space, signal strength decreases as an "inverse square" function with distance. Everytime you double the distance between the transmitter and receiver, the signal strength decreases by 6 dB (i.e., it becomes only 1/4 as strong). Think of shining a flashlight on a wall. As you move the flashlight further away, it illuminates a larger area, but the intensity decreases. Yes, low power can cover great distances in free space. But power is not is not meaningless. If it were, you wouldn't need those big dishes for C-Band satellite reception. Free space path loss equation: Path Loss (dB) = 36.6 + 20 Log F + 20 Log D Where F is frequency in MHz, and D is distance in miles. (Assumes isotropic antennas at each end, 0 dBi gain). Art Harris N2AH |