R. Fry said:Ermi Roos said:... It would not surprise me if US agents are directed not to cite for field strengths lower than 1000 uV/m at 3 m. Such an allowance would account for imperfect measurements caused by reflections and other terrain effects.
Field strengths produced by a "Part 15 FM" transmit system based on measurements made considerably further than 3 m away from the transmit antenna cannot be extrapolated to the true value of the peak field existing 3 m away from such a transmit system -- accurate as those distant measurements may be for the fields existing at those locations beyond 3 m.
In such cases and depending on path geometries, reflections/obstructions/terrain effects for those distances can produce a REDUCTION in received fields, rather than their improvement over the theoretical fields for free-space, unobstructed paths.
A single, in-phase reflection arriving at the receive antenna from a surface having a reflection coefficient of 100% improves the free-space field there by about 6 dB.
Such a reflection received 180 degrees out of phase from the free-space field (due to path geometries) completely cancels that free space field.
No NEC graphs?