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CBS' KFWB shuts off IBOC at night
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "Steve" wrote in message ups.com... On Oct 10, 2:27 pm, dxAce wrote: Good grief, is it possible that this guy's been caught in yet ANOTHER lie? Tardo, you might want to try telling the truth. Your attempts at deception just aren't working for you. The 1974 license on my website is a RENEWAL. NOT! Since I was chief operator of WUNO from late '70 to mid-'72, and that requires not only a 1st ticket but notification of the Engineer in Charge of the FCC field office, there is, no doubt, somewhere record of it. |
CBS' KFWB shuts off IBOC at night
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Wrong. I received it in 1969 at the FCC offices on M Street in DC. So, in what year did you receive your non-existent amateur radio license? The authorization, which was not a license certificate, but an "oficio" was in '66 or '67. Guess that's why it never shows up anywhere! "oficio" must mean "faux". An "oficio" is basically an "edict" and is a folio with fiscal stamps and a notification text. |
CBS' KFWB shuts off IBOC at night
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: The folded dipole is also appropriate, like a Franklin, when there is a bad ground system, such as antennas in marshes and salt flats where they corrode, or where there are structures on the property. Yeah. That's why I thought it would be more popular in central and south America where expensive or difficult to install, due to terrain, grounding systems requirements could be reduced. Why would the terrain considerations, grounding requirements and such be any different than in, say, Idaho or Wisconsin or Arizona or Alabama? They would not and since when is Idaho, Wisconsin, Arizona or Alabama in south America? And why would it be more expensive to do in Central and South America? I can see no logic in any of this set of statements. Where did I say it was more expensive in SA? The logic is why spend money you don't have to spend. The problem looks to be reading comprehension. A unipois also useful with a shorter than 1/4 wave tower because the tuning network needed to tune out the capacitive reactance often narrowbands the antenna (not the tower itself). That my point. The shunt type coupling is more broadband. Only for very short towers where a high capacitive reactance is found. Otherwise, the bandwidth is much more the effect of the Q of the ATU and the trandsmitter itself. No. So a unipole is mostly used to compensate for bad ground systems and the need to multitask the tower, not to reduce the noxious effects of a less than conforming tower, as the FCC requires a very special showing to allow low antennas. I don't know what you mean by "the FCC requires a very special showing to allow low antennas" but I wasn't after the shorter tower aspect. That is the only place where the unipole offers a distinct bandwidth advantage. It also gets a better field strength at 1 km than a short series fed tower. But the main reason anyone uses them is either due to a bad ground or the need to put other antennas on the tower. A broader cross section will broadband the tower a bit, but the difference in a 24" to 30" cross section and a folded dipole is minimal. That's not my understanding. Go back to Carl Smith's AM antenna and DA handbooks, Unless you find a nice old Blaw Knox with a 24 foot center cross section, there is not much gain except cost, maintenance, etc., in adding outriggers insofar as broadbanding. I don't have that book so I can't do that but general theory would indicate otherwise and there are companies that offer tower kits to improve bandwidth performance as I have described. The bandwidth for AM is, by NRSC, 10 kHz in each sideband... actually, a little less. This is to avoid 10 kHz harmonics with adjacent channels. You usually make measurements beyond spec to show the trend over the entire specification. Here the spec is VSWR. A well tuned tower of 1/4 wave has less than 1.08 to 1 vizwar. And, except for test situations, a tower measurement is usually done at -10, licenced frequency and +10 kHz. This is what is often asked for by outside fabricators of ATUs. Again that is not my understanding of tower VSWR. The levels at 5, 10, and 15 KHz are much higher than you indicate, which requires mitigation efforts. A well tuned ATU, whether high Q or broadbanded, does not create a significant amount of reflected power. A tower that is mismatched at carrier does. Yes that is my point. The tower itself will have a narrow resonant bandwidth so a method is needed for the tower to not present a high VSWR +/- 15 KHz around the carrier frequency. A mismatch is generally considered to be a mismatch of impedance output of the ATU with the tower itself at the fundamental. Since the audio is brick-walled right under 10 kHz, there should be little or no excursions beyond +/- 10 kHz. For analog +/- 10 KHz sounds reasonable but it looks like IBOC is going past that number. The testing recommendation I read suggests testing to +/- 15 KHz. ATU's that couple the coax transmission line to the tower using a series connection to an insulated tower have a stronger tendency to be narrowband in and of themselves. Not for the last 40 years or so. High Q was much more common pre-60's when AMs mostly ran network showsthat came over 5 kHz lines from very far away. When music took over AM, stations wanted better bandwidth. I don't see how that can be improved. Series feeding the tower will require a fairly high Q network that is inherently narrow band compared to a shunt feed method. An ATU designed to couple the coax transmission line to a shunt fed tower tends to tune a little less sharply and the useful resonance range is broader. Since true shunts are no longer licensed, this point is moot. Most US AMs, for economy, zoning, FAA, etc. use quarter wave series fed towers. Since a huge percentage are directional, there are very, very few Unipole directionals, so in that area series fed is the only way to go. I don't see where you keep on this tack about Unipoles as they can just as easily be part of a directional network. The FCC no longer authorizes shunt fed towers. Why? I don't know. This has been the case for many decades. I suspect part has to do with the slight directionality the shunt itself introduces, and the fact that shunts would be very difficult to do with directional stations for this reason. I don't see where a Unipole would present a problem in a directional network. The unipole is the closest you get to this; one manufacturer, Kintronics, who makes kits to order, compares them with shunt fed systems. So, except for the unipoles, all US towers for AM are insulated from ground. I don't understand why the FCC would care how transmission lines are coupled to the tower or tuned / matched by an ATU. There is a lot about AM radio in the US you don't understand. The fact is, shunt fed towers are very seldom used. I suspect that the fact that they are not particulary easy to tune on short, 1/2 wave towers may be part of it, but there must be more. Yeah, there must be another reason. Transmission lines are never couple to the tower (with maybe one or two exceptions... more later) because so few towers are a perfect impedance match with the coax and devoid of +j or -j. An antenna coupling unit is placed between the coax and the tower, using a network to match the tower to line impedance and to bring reactance to zero at the carrier. The ATU is typically attached to the tower with a copper strap, copper tubing or sometimes even braid. In any case, it is silver soldered to a connector, which is usually pressure bolted to the output of the ATU and to a leg or the base plate of the tower. That's all interesting information but we are mixing and matching terminology. The ATU doesn't just tune the tower to resonance it is also a part of circuitry that couples the transmission line to the tower. An ATU is not necessary if the tower is 52 ohms and not reactive, found around about 100 to 110 degrees in electrical height. The ATU is a matching circuit, to make the coax "see" 52 ohms (or some other impedance) when, in fact, the tower is not of that impedance. In some senses, a top hat or top loading does the same thing... it makes the tower change the apparent electrical height. You are trying to complicate something that is relatively simple... cancelling the reactance and matching impedance. That's fine if the coax and transmitter output impedance is 52 ohms. I didn't realize I was making it more complicated I was just trying to explain the dynamics of tuning the tower. An ATU is usually necessary. Reactance is near zero at resonance and the antenna looks like a resistive load to the transmission line. The resistive load value also needs to match the line impedance so there is little or no reflective power. This is one reason why transmitters are getting damaged when IBOC is turned on. The reflective power goes up over the increased power bandwidth IBOC requires. That is not why the very few cases of transmitter damage have occured. Most transmitters will simply shut down over reactive or mismatched loads. The issues reported (and one that took out 80% of the power modules at KTNQ) had to do with the control interface of the HD exciter and the analog transmitter.... a design defect in non-rf and non-af circuitry. Wow, I guess the engineering of the IBOC working group really sucks. I figured something in the way of the application in the field is what would bring things down. This is far worse that I imagined. Several things happen when the reflected power goes up. Mainly the power does not go into the antenna to be radiated and instead heats the transmission line and transmitter finals. Another bad effect is the reflected power can make the transmitter unstable and generate spurious energy. Or, in today's transmitters, it does neither. It detects VSWR and shuts off. And all my equipment has fuses or circuit breakers but I usually apply effort toward making sure they are not used. This method was used by a few high power AMs in Latin America in decades past, ones like XEB and XEW. The rest, if they have a tower (many use inverted L's of wire) use series fed towers. Since many towers are diplexed and even triplexed, a rejection network is required and that requires an ATU. Shunt fed towers are generally half wave or similar, and shunt feeding is not and has never been common with quarter wave or less towers. I have visited every AM in Mexico City, and only 3 had shunt fed towers in 1963... today, I believe only XEW has one. In Colombia, I have visited about 20 50 kw or higher sites, and none was shunt fed. In Ecuador, today and in the past, no station was shunt fed. Of the several hundred stations I visited in Central America, none was shunt fed. The most powerful AM in Argentina, Radio 10 on 710 with 100 kw, with a nice half wave tower, is series fed. The only other Latin American shunt fed I know about was CB106 Radio Mineria in Santiago. That station, saying AM was no longer viable in Chile, turned in its license and turned off the 100 kw transmitter nearly a decade ago. You sure get around. Yes, I have worked in every nation in Latin America save Cuba and Nicaragua, and visited stations in each one. There are pictures of dozens and dozens stations I took, including some shunt fed ones, on my web page, from trips I made visiting stations. The fact is you have said that shunt feeding is common in Latin America where it is highly uncommon and always has been. You made statements about costs, land and towers in Latin America that make it sound like you think we are talking about another planet, not the same Hemisphere. In fact, the conditions and terrain in South Florida are more difficult and hostile than in most places in Latin America. I don't see the need to be so defensive about what I posted. I made it clear it was an assumption and explained my logic for those assumptions. The reasoning was technical and there is no need to try to make it into something else. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
CBS' KFWB shuts off IBOC at night
In article ,
David wrote: On Wed, 10 Oct 2007 04:19:00 GMT, Telamon wrote: I don't understand why the FCC would care how transmission lines are coupled to the tower or tuned / matched by an ATU. An influential senator has an interest in a company that makes base insulators? Very funny. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
CBS' KFWB shuts off IBOC at night
In article ,
"Brenda Ann" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... I would say bandwidth. Large aspect ratio antenna elements have a narrow band of resonance. It seems to me that there are some companies out there that have tower kits that run 3 to 4 wires on spreaders so the electrical diameter of the tower is increased. This will allow the tower to have lower VSWR over the +/-15KHz required. I've been in on installing one of those kits.. lot of fun when you have the backup tower for the station only a few dozens of yards away.. you don't want to forget to connect that ground in at least two places on the way down the tower.. :) That's great. Tell us how it works out when you tune it up. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
CBS' KFWB shuts off IBOC at night
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: Yeah. That's why I thought it would be more popular in central and south America where expensive or difficult to install, due to terrain, grounding systems requirements could be reduced. Why would the terrain considerations, grounding requirements and such be any different than in, say, Idaho or Wisconsin or Arizona or Alabama? They would not and since when is Idaho, Wisconsin, Arizona or Alabama in south America? I asked why South or Central America would have conditions of terrain, grounding or cost any different than those states? I have no idea why you think a unipole would be of any greater advantage there than in, say, Lake City, FL? Why? In a simple sentence; why would grounding be different than in the US. Another: why would the terrain be different than in the US? And why would it be more expensive to do in Central and South America? I can see no logic in any of this set of statements. Where did I say it was more expensive in SA? You said that Latin America is "where (it is) expensive to install..." And I do not see that it is expensive at all, and where a unipole would be less expensive. The logic is why spend money you don't have to spend. The problem looks to be reading comprehension. Importing a unipole kit from the US (nobody makes them or uses them in Latin America) and bringing in an experiienced installer would be much more expensive than a simple to build and maintain series fed antenna. Every nation in Latin America has a local tower fabricator and erector or two. A unipois also useful with a shorter than 1/4 wave tower because the tuning network needed to tune out the capacitive reactance often narrowbands the antenna (not the tower itself). That my point. The shunt type coupling is more broadband. Only for very short towers where a high capacitive reactance is found. Otherwise, the bandwidth is much more the effect of the Q of the ATU and the trandsmitter itself. No. You obviously have not measured may, if any, AM vertical radiators. Untill they get very wide, like the old towers of the 20's and 30's which were built like scaffolding, there is no appreciale benefit in width, and the cost at any optimum point is prohibitative and likely will get no zoning clearance. The problem with bandwidth can be solved by ATU design, and VSWR reduced to less than 1.09 to 1 at 10 kHz with ease. Go back to Carl Smith's AM antenna and DA handbooks, Unless you find a nice old Blaw Knox with a 24 foot center cross section, there is not much gain except cost, maintenance, etc., in adding outriggers insofar as broadbanding. I don't have that book so I can't do that but general theory would indicate otherwise and there are companies that offer tower kits to improve bandwidth performance as I have described. The purpose of a unipole is to allow the tower to be at ground potential so we can get point to point and other antenna rentals without isocouplers. It is also to compensate for bad grounds, like where a parking lot and shopping center now sit on the ground system. Bandwidth is mostly enhanced below 1/4 wave, and the FCC only licences such towers under extreme circumstances... very few towers under 90 degrees exist in the US. I've seen a bunch of non-licensed stations, such as AFRTS facilities using them though.... 1040 at Ft. Brook used one to tune a roughly 75 foot tower and it did not sound too dreadful, either. Rame, on 780, used one on a 50 foot tower, also. A well tuned tower of 1/4 wave has less than 1.08 to 1 vizwar. And, except for test situations, a tower measurement is usually done at -10, licenced frequency and +10 kHz. This is what is often asked for by outside fabricators of ATUs. Again that is not my understanding of tower VSWR. The levels at 5, 10, and 15 KHz are much higher than you indicate, which requires mitigation efforts. The ATU will generally create a 52 ohm match at carrier, and j 0. At plus or minus 10 kHz, we would look for well under 1.1 to 1 VSWR with a good ATU. They can be designed to give even less than that, but considering the amount of entergy under NRSC at 10 kHz is minimal, that is often good enough. A mismatch is generally considered to be a mismatch of impedance output of the ATU with the tower itself at the fundamental. Since the audio is brick-walled right under 10 kHz, there should be little or no excursions beyond +/- 10 kHz. For analog +/- 10 KHz sounds reasonable but it looks like IBOC is going past that number. The testing recommendation I read suggests testing to +/- 15 KHz. The stations for which AM HD is even appropriate are major stations in each market only... and most of these have nicely designed antennas. The very directional stations are going to have more problems in the phasor than in the ATU and tower. Phasors have to be a compromise of tunability (High Q) and bandwidth... so the bottleneck is in the phasor, the rest of the system being infinitely more tolerant. Not for the last 40 years or so. High Q was much more common pre-60's when AMs mostly ran network showsthat came over 5 kHz lines from very far away. When music took over AM, stations wanted better bandwidth. I don't see how that can be improved. Series feeding the tower will require a fairly high Q network that is inherently narrow band compared to a shunt feed method. The kind of network and the network design can make a pretty decent broadbanding within licensed bandwith possible. In any case, you are not going to get a shunt fed tower in the US, and you are not going to get shunt fed directionals anywhere. Since true shunts are no longer licensed, this point is moot. Most US AMs, for economy, zoning, FAA, etc. use quarter wave series fed towers. Since a huge percentage are directional, there are very, very few Unipole directionals, so in that area series fed is the only way to go. I don't see where you keep on this tack about Unipoles as they can just as easily be part of a directional network. Shunt fed towers tend to have slight directionality, and unipoles have enormous mechanical instability, making adjusting a unipole directional and meeting licensing requirements something that might not even be possible. And the cost of readjusting as the outriggers move about and the wires strech and age would be huge... most station engineers do not adjust their own directionals... a consulting engineer does, at great cost. I don't see where a Unipole would present a problem in a directional network. See above. Mechanical stability is the first issue. An ATU is not necessary if the tower is 52 ohms and not reactive, found around about 100 to 110 degrees in electrical height. The ATU is a matching circuit, to make the coax "see" 52 ohms (or some other impedance) when, in fact, the tower is not of that impedance. In some senses, a top hat or top loading does the same thing... it makes the tower change the apparent electrical height. You are trying to complicate something that is relatively simple... cancelling the reactance and matching impedance. That's fine if the coax and transmitter output impedance is 52 ohms. I didn't realize I was making it more complicated I was just trying to explain the dynamics of tuning the tower. How many towers have you tuned? An ATU is usually necessary. Always unless there is a perfect match. I chatted with some engineers who are into this sort of thing, and we came up with one station in the west, the 1590 in the Victor Valley about two decades ago... it has since moved and has a doghouse at the tower base, now. That is not why the very few cases of transmitter damage have occured. Most transmitters will simply shut down over reactive or mismatched loads. The issues reported (and one that took out 80% of the power modules at KTNQ) had to do with the control interface of the HD exciter and the analog transmitter.... a design defect in non-rf and non-af circuitry. Wow, I guess the engineering of the IBOC working group really sucks. I figured something in the way of the application in the field is what would bring things down. This is far worse that I imagined. iBiquity does not design exciters. In this case, the HD exciter was built by one of the big three transmitter companies, and it had a "design mismatch" (read "flaw") when mated to one particular transmitter which they did not even manufacture. It's the price stations pay for being early on the curve... which is usual in major markets because, problem and all, such stations have at least one backup transmitter, and many have two. Or, in today's transmitters, it does neither. It detects VSWR and shuts off. And all my equipment has fuses or circuit breakers but I usually apply effort toward making sure they are not used. In the case of transmitters, the control circuit performs system shutdown or power reduction to protect itself without fuses or circuit breakers; a high VSWR might cause a transmitter to progressively fall back to half power, half again, and so on until it can operate... or it shuts off. The fact is you have said that shunt feeding is common in Latin America where it is highly uncommon and always has been. You made statements about costs, land and towers in Latin America that make it sound like you think we are talking about another planet, not the same Hemisphere. In fact, the conditions and terrain in South Florida are more difficult and hostile than in most places in Latin America. I don't see the need to be so defensive about what I posted. I made it clear it was an assumption and explained my logic for those assumptions. The reasoning was technical and there is no need to try to make it into something else. In that case, I do apologize. I may have mistakenly thought you were one of the multitude that thinks that all of Latin America consists of terrain that can only be found in an Indiana Jones movie; the fact is that the land anywhere there is comparable to some place in the US. Towers tend to cost less, as they are locally fabricated and the labor costs are lower; ATUs and such can be made from off the shelf caps and coils you can wind from automotive AC tubing if the need arises. |
CBS' KFWB shuts off IBOC at night
On Oct 10, 11:17 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: Yeah. That's why I thought it would be more popular in central and south America where expensive or difficult to install, due to terrain, grounding systems requirements could be reduced. Why would the terrain considerations, grounding requirements and such be any different than in, say, Idaho or Wisconsin or Arizona or Alabama? They would not and since when is Idaho, Wisconsin, Arizona or Alabama in south America? I asked why South or Central America would have conditions of terrain, grounding or cost any different than those states? I have no idea why you think a unipole would be of any greater advantage there than in, say, Lake City, FL? Why? In a simple sentence; why would grounding be different than in the US. Another: why would the terrain be different than in the US? And why would it be more expensive to do in Central and South America? I can see no logic in any of this set of statements. Where did I say it was more expensive in SA? You said that Latin America is "where (it is) expensive to install..." And I do not see that it is expensive at all, and where a unipole would be less expensive. The logic is why spend money you don't have to spend. The problem looks to be reading comprehension. Importing a unipole kit from the US (nobody makes them or uses them in Latin America) and bringing in an experiienced installer would be much more expensive than a simple to build and maintain series fed antenna. Every nation in Latin America has a local tower fabricator and erector or two. A unipois also useful with a shorter than 1/4 wave tower because the tuning network needed to tune out the capacitive reactance often narrowbands the antenna (not the tower itself). That my point. The shunt type coupling is more broadband. Only for very short towers where a high capacitive reactance is found. Otherwise, the bandwidth is much more the effect of the Q of the ATU and the trandsmitter itself. No. You obviously have not measured may, if any, AM vertical radiators. Untill they get very wide, like the old towers of the 20's and 30's which were built like scaffolding, there is no appreciale benefit in width, and the cost at any optimum point is prohibitative and likely will get no zoning clearance. The problem with bandwidth can be solved by ATU design, and VSWR reduced to less than 1.09 to 1 at 10 kHz with ease. Go back to Carl Smith's AM antenna and DA handbooks, Unless you find a nice old Blaw Knox with a 24 foot center cross section, there is not much gain except cost, maintenance, etc., in adding outriggers insofar as broadbanding. I don't have that book so I can't do that but general theory would indicate otherwise and there are companies that offer tower kits to improve bandwidth performance as I have described. The purpose of a unipole is to allow the tower to be at ground potential so we can get point to point and other antenna rentals without isocouplers. It is also to compensate for bad grounds, like where a parking lot and shopping center now sit on the ground system. Bandwidth is mostly enhanced below 1/4 wave, and the FCC only licences such towers under extreme circumstances... very few towers under 90 degrees exist in the US. I've seen a bunch of non-licensed stations, such as AFRTS facilities using them though.... 1040 at Ft. Brook used one to tune a roughly 75 foot tower and it did not sound too dreadful, either. Rame, on 780, used one on a 50 foot tower, also. A well tuned tower of 1/4 wave has less than 1.08 to 1 vizwar. And, except for test situations, a tower measurement is usually done at -10, licenced frequency and +10 kHz. This is what is often asked for by outside fabricators of ATUs. Again that is not my understanding of tower VSWR. The levels at 5, 10, and 15 KHz are much higher than you indicate, which requires mitigation efforts. The ATU will generally create a 52 ohm match at carrier, and j 0. At plus or minus 10 kHz, we would look for well under 1.1 to 1 VSWR with a good ATU. They can be designed to give even less than that, but considering the amount of entergy under NRSC at 10 kHz is minimal, that is often good enough. A mismatch is generally considered to be a mismatch of impedance output of the ATU with the tower itself at the fundamental. Since the audio is brick-walled right under 10 kHz, there should be little or no excursions beyond +/- 10 kHz. For analog +/- 10 KHz sounds reasonable but it looks like IBOC is going past that number. The testing recommendation I read suggests testing to +/- 15 KHz. The stations for which AM HD is even appropriate are major stations in each market only... and most of these have nicely designed antennas. The very directional stations are going to have more problems in the phasor than in the ATU and tower. Phasors have to be a compromise of tunability (High Q) and bandwidth... so the bottleneck is in the phasor, the rest of the system being infinitely more tolerant. Not for the last 40 years or so. High Q was much more common pre-60's when AMs mostly ran network showsthat came over 5 kHz lines from very far away. When music took over AM, stations wanted better bandwidth. I don't see how that can be improved. Series feeding the tower will require a fairly high Q network that is inherently narrow band compared to a shunt feed method. The kind of network and the network design can make a pretty decent broadbanding within licensed bandwith possible. In any case, you are not going to get a shunt fed tower in the US, and you are not going to get shunt fed directionals anywhere. Since true shunts are no longer licensed, this point is moot. Most US AMs, for economy, zoning, FAA, etc. use quarter wave series fed towers. Since a huge percentage are directional, there are very, very few Unipole directionals, so in that area series fed is the only way to go. I don't see where you keep on this tack about Unipoles as they can just as easily be part of a directional network. Shunt fed towers tend to have slight directionality, and unipoles have enormous mechanical instability, making adjusting a unipole directional and meeting licensing requirements something that might not even be possible. And the cost of readjusting as the outriggers move about and the wires strech and age would be huge... most station engineers do not adjust their own directionals... a consulting engineer does, at great cost. I don't see where a Unipole would present a problem in a directional network. See above. Mechanical stability is the first issue. An ATU is not necessary if the tower is 52 ohms and not reactive, found around about 100 to 110 degrees in electrical height. The ATU is a matching circuit, to make the coax "see" 52 ohms (or some other impedance) when, in fact, the tower is not of that impedance. In some senses, a top hat or top loading does the same thing... it makes the tower change the apparent electrical height. You are trying to complicate something that is relatively simple... cancelling the reactance and matching impedance. That's fine if the coax and transmitter output impedance is 52 ohms. I didn't realize I was making it more complicated I was just trying to explain the dynamics of tuning the tower. How many towers have you tuned? An ATU is usually necessary. Always unless there is a perfect match. I chatted with some engineers who are into this sort of thing, and we came up with one station in the west, the 1590 in the Victor Valley about two decades ago... it has since moved and has a doghouse at the tower base, now. That is not why the very few cases of transmitter damage have occured. Most transmitters will simply shut down over reactive or mismatched loads. The issues reported (and one that took out 80% of the power modules at KTNQ) had to do with the control interface of the HD exciter and the analog transmitter.... a design defect in non-rf and non-af circuitry. Wow, I guess the engineering of the IBOC working group really sucks. I figured something in the way of the application in the field is what would bring things down. This is far worse that I imagined. iBiquity does not design exciters. In this case, the HD exciter was built by one of the big three transmitter companies, and it had a "design mismatch" (read "flaw") when mated to one particular transmitter which they did not even manufacture. It's the price stations pay for being early on the curve... which is usual in major markets because, problem and all, such stations have at least one backup transmitter, and many have two. Or, in today's transmitters, it does neither. It detects VSWR and shuts off. And all my equipment has fuses or circuit breakers but I usually apply effort toward making sure they are not used. In the case of transmitters, the control circuit performs system shutdown or power reduction to protect itself without fuses or circuit breakers; a high VSWR might cause a transmitter to progressively fall back to half power, half again, and so on until it can operate... or it shuts off. The fact is you have said that shunt feeding is common in Latin America where it is highly uncommon and always has been. You made statements about costs, land and towers in Latin America that make it sound like you think we are talking about another planet, not the same Hemisphere. In fact, the conditions and terrain in South Florida are more difficult and hostile than in ... read more »- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Of course, none of this justifies your lying about your academic background. |
CBS' KFWB shuts off IBOC at night
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "Brenda Ann" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... I would say bandwidth. Large aspect ratio antenna elements have a narrow band of resonance. It seems to me that there are some companies out there that have tower kits that run 3 to 4 wires on spreaders so the electrical diameter of the tower is increased. This will allow the tower to have lower VSWR over the +/-15KHz required. I've been in on installing one of those kits.. lot of fun when you have the backup tower for the station only a few dozens of yards away.. you don't want to forget to connect that ground in at least two places on the way down the tower.. :) That's great. Tell us how it works out when you tune it up. In about 1989, we put a unipole on WDSR 1340 in Lake City, FL. The tower was actually over 90 degrees, but the base was nearly 100 feet offshore in the lake (thus the city name). The brackish water had pretty much dissolved the ground system after some 40 years, and we put down a large ground mesh in the water around the tower, and put a unipole on. The folks form Tennessee came down, and they supervised the rigger. they strapped the tower base plate to ground with three 2" copper straps, and use experience, the known impedance of the tower and the rigger to find a connect point. They were close enough that only two minor moves of less than a meter fund the right match, and the station was back on the air. The unipole did increase coverage, in an area where ground conductivity is horrible. We did not notice any audio change, good or bad. The only long term bad thing is that the outriggers had to be retensioned a bit, and in major storms flying objects could break the wires or dislodge the fiberglass yardarms that held them away from the tower, and on one occasion breaking the critters off at the tower mount. I would not want one in a hurricane prone region, as it would fly off the tower at the first impact of airborne aluminum siding or trash cans. |
CBS' KFWB shuts off IBOC at night
"Steve" wrote in message oups.com... Of course, none of this justifies your lying about your academic background. It's obviously past your bedtime. But, before you go, there is a Boise 50 kw AM on Craigslist for $800 thousand dollars... why don't you buy it and impress us all with your radio talent and knowledge? Of course, the potty words you erupt with here will have to be controlled, perhaps with a muzzle. |
CBS' KFWB shuts off IBOC at night
"Telamon" wrote in message ... I don't see the need to be so defensive about what I posted. I made it clear it was an assumption and explained my logic for those assumptions. The reasoning was technical and there is no need to try to make it into something else. By the way, thank you for an interesting and civil discussion. Your technical knowledge is obviously extensive, and some of my anecdotal or field experience may be unknown to you. Goes to show... we can learn from each other. I hope... |
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