R. Fry wrote:
<And -- thanks for using a more civil tone in your responses to my more recent posts here.>
I am but a mirror...
Quote from: Black_Shire
...results have shown that sacrificing some of the allowed 15 meter height to include capacitive top loading has consistently yielded better results (stronger signal reports) than 15 meter verticals with no top loading.
<This will be true if (and only if) sufficient narrowing of the r-f bandwidth can be tolerated from a Part 15 LF Tee antenna with a total length of 15 meters for the sum of the vertical and horizontal parts of the Tee. It isn't because more radiation is launched by the Tee from some height above "tree level," and so suffers less propagation loss. The Tee and the 15-m vertical both have maximum field in the horizontal plane (as shown in my earlier graphic link in this thread).>
The vast majority of LowFER beacon antennas are only used for slow CW, Phase-Shift Keying, or other non-voice modes, so a very narrow bandwidth isn't a problem for them. Ed Gelinas' Part 15 Long Wave AM music station is the only one of its kind currently operating, to my knowledge. Some of his antenna consists of the wide and tall loading coil in his yard, with the rest of the antenna mounted directly above it.
For the maximum antenna bandwidth, I would probably build a 4-wire cage around a wooden telephone pole with the wires connected at the top and bottom to form a square-section "wire skeleton bar" vertical radiator. I would also include four or more capacitive top loading wires, all connected at their outer ends by a perimeter "halo" wire to form a square (or hexagonal or octagonal) "top hat" to lower the antenna's Q and increase its bandwidth. (This is also a type of NDB antenna [without a "top hat"], as shown in Chapter 11 of "The Art of NDB DXing" by Sheldon Remington
www.lwca.org/library/articles/kh6sr/artndb11.htm ).
This antenna's radiation resistance (and therefore its radiating efficiency) would probably be low if built within the 15 meter size limit. However, since the objective is to cover a local (~2 mile radius) area with a 9 kHz or 10 kHz wide AM signal instead of being received hundreds of miles away by slow CW or PSK as LowFers do, antenna system inefficiency in exchange for greater antenna bandwidth is an acceptable trade-off.
Quote from: Black Shire
Long Wave Non-Directional Beacon (NDB) antennas, while not size-restricted by the Part 15 LowFER beacon rules, also show a preference for top loading width over height. Most of them are short and broad, even at NDBs that operate just above the 160 kHz - 190 kHz Part 15 LowFER beacon band frequencies. My local NDBs are typical examples--each uses a 3-wire Marconi "Tee" antenna with 3 center drop wires bonded together at the feed point to form a flat triangular "wire skeleton" vertical radiating element. These antennas are only about 15 feet tall with a top-load wire half-span of about 25 feet, yet they operate at frequencies (in my area) as low as 257 kHz.
<Yes, that is apparent both from a knowledge of physics, and my experience with a 270 kHz NDB system that I was responsible for during my military duty back in 1962. But NDB stations and the typical LowFER hobbiest operator don't need the r-f bandwidth required for high-fidelity (or even telephone quality) broadcasting.>
What station was that? Alex Wiecek (an NDB installation & maintenance technician and NDB DXer I know) or one of the other NDB DXers I correspond with may possibly have visited and photographed the site. Alex alone has photo-documented scores of NDB sites.
A 3-wire Marconi "Tee" antenna with a multiple drop wire vertical radiating element may also have sufficient bandwidth to pass a 9 kHz or 10 kHz AM signal. In his book "Urban Antennas: Volume 1" (pages 122 - 123, in Chapter 4, "Antennas For 136 kHz"), Igor Grigorov RK3ZK described and illustrated this very antenna as being used for low-power Long Wave broadcasting stations as well as for NDBs. He also described and illustrated a directional variation of this antenna which is configured as an "Inverted L," with the vertical drop wires connected to one end of the flat top and with the antenna mounted off-center over the ground radial wires to increase the radiation in the direction of the flat top's far end.
-- Black Shire