Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Joe Buch" wrote in message ... Doug Smith W9WI wrote: 47CFR73.189 establishes minimum tower heights for AM stations, depending on class and frequency. For example, a Class C station above 1200KHz must use a tower at least 45m tall, while a Class A station on 650 must use one at least 165m in height. Under certain circumstances these requirements can be waived if the station can meet field-strength requirements with a shorter tower. -- The question was addressing tower height limits which I interpreted as being maximums rather than minimums. Thanks for your clarification. There is a company, Valcom, in Guelph, Ontario Canada that is advertising in the US radio magazines that they are selling MW band antennas as short as 15 meters. These look like linearly loaded fibreglass poles with large capacity hats at the top. I wonder if any of these have been licensed in the USA. Would not a waiver be granted for such an antenna if the field strength requirements could be met? It seems to me one could supply the specified field strength with any reasonably short antenna as long as one was willing to crank up the transmitter power output to counter the loss in efficiency. I think that would be permissible under FCC rules but I am not sure. Those antennas are for TIS type stations. No way to either feed them high power or get them to tune efficiently. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FCC: Broadband Power Line Systems | Policy | |||
a great read | CB | |||
High school radio stations alive and well | Broadcasting | |||
Yagi height and tower recomendations | Antenna | |||
Different Power at Different Times of Day | Broadcasting |