This
article, found on an Amateur Radio site, states that the antenna was capable of 30 dB gain. It also mentions co-phasing three transmitters into the array.
Thanks for that link and I see where this is going.
From the linked article:
In 1988 an experimental high-gain, multiple-band curtain array antenna was installed. The antenna operates from 6MHz to 26MHz and has six separate input ports.
Okay, seems I am using the term curtain array antenna differently than the author of the linked article. The author calls the entire structure one antenna, operating from 6MHz to 26MHz with six inputs.
That premise is incorrect, for none of the six inputs can go from 6MHz to 26MHz. I don't know the exact split point, but typically the low band arrays, would go from 6 MHz to somewhere between 12MHz and 15MHz and the high band arrays would go from somewhere between 12MHz and 15MHz to 26MHz.
For the typical naming convention within the IBB network, each of those inputs and the related antenna array, each are one antenna. In other words, six antennas, three for low band frequency use and three for high band frequency use. Yes, I think all six antennas could be air at the same time, but I don't know that for sure.
In its maximum gain configuration this antenna has a gain of 30dB - a power increase in the beam direction of 1,000 times. In this mode the antenna consists of 72 phased folded dipole elements arranged as 6 high 12 wide "Lazy H."
Well, if the antenna is 72 phased dipoles, then it is only three of the arrays. The other three arrays would consist of another 72 phased dipole. From a IBB transmitter and antenna scheduling viewpoint, again, this antenna system would be six antennas.
By co-phasing three transmitters into this antenna, the station has experimentally achieved an effective peak radiated power of 1.125 gigawatts.
I alluded to this earlier, but from a practical standpoint, I am not sure the agency ever used the antenna systems and transmitters at Delano in this manner. From a technical standpoint, yes, it certainly can be done. From a programming standpoint, the difference in signal strength at a given location between one transmitter on one antenna and three transmitters, three antennas, same bearing and frequency, just doesn't seem to offset the advantage of three transmitters, lower ERP, but on three different frequencies, into the same target area.
Yes, and I believe it was Greenville B Site which had the BBC World Service on two transmitters, same frequency, but if I recall correctly, the two antennas used had different antenna bearings. Three transmitters, same frequency, three different antenna systems, same bearing, even the transmission feed line lengths would have to be taken into account for transmitter phasing.