How does it work on AM/FM/TV??
like KCBS 740 beems it signal down North and South, But not East
If all the Antenna's are up ward
like KCBS 740 beems it signal down North and South, But not East
If all the Antenna's are up ward
MarioMania said:How does it work on AM/FM/TV??
like KCBS 740 beems it signal down North and South, But not East
If all the Antenna's are up ward
gar fla said:I never knew that FM stations could be directional because the few stations I've looked at on Radio Locator all showed patterns of exact circles.
But I know how you know your stuff when it comes to this kind of thing, so it's interesting to learn something I never knew about.
As far as AM directional stations go, I'm only a couple miles from 970 WFLA and 1250 WHNZ which both share the same towers.
The multiple tower complex is quite a sight to drive by up close.
DavidEduardo said:gar fla said:I never knew that FM stations could be directional because the few stations I've looked at on Radio Locator all showed patterns of exact circles.
But I know how you know your stuff when it comes to this kind of thing, so it's interesting to learn something I never knew about.
As far as AM directional stations go, I'm only a couple miles from 970 WFLA and 1250 WHNZ which both share the same towers.
The multiple tower complex is quite a sight to drive by up close.
Look at the pattern of KKLA in Los Angeles, 99.5. That is one of the more extreme ones.
Interestingly, stations sharing multiple towers can have entirely different patterns, based on the amount and phase of energy sent to each tower. Multiple stations can be fed to one or more towers, as it is just a matter of each sending the power to the tower or towers, and filtering so the other station does not sent its power back into the transmitter of the other station.
R. Fry said:The usual purpose for using a directional AM broadcast array is to minimize interference to co- and adjacent-channel stations.
Scott Fybush said:No, you can't diplex co-channel stations, or even stations on closely adjacent channels. Even if you're creating different patterns out of the antenna, you're putting RF from two transmitters into common towers, and you need to be able to install filtering to prevent station A from feeding RF back into station B's transmitter, and vice versa. Just because they're going into the towers with different phasing doesn't mean you can then filter what comes back down the transmission line on the same frequency on which you're trying to transmit.
Conventional wisdom says you need at least a 10% difference in frequency to make a diplexed AM antenna system work. The tightest one I know about, in practice, is the 1290/1340 (and 1490) in Santa Barbara, and it comes at a price: the very sharp filtering needed to make 1290 and 1340 work also significantly cuts into the audio bandwidth of both stations. That site "works" only to the extent that both 1290 and 1340 can stay on the air in a market where land-usage issues might otherwise prevent them from finding transmitter sites.
pianoplayer88key said:...In the multi-azimuth examples, the mountain peak is about 26,400 ft AMSL, and the tower height is about 1980 ft AGL.
In the above examples, on FM stations, how closely could they be spaced? Could they possibly all be co-channel, considering they're all aimed different directions from different bays on the same tower?
(2) Directional antennas used to protect short-spaced stations
pursuant to Sec. 73.213 or Sec. 73.215 of the rules, that have a
radiation pattern which varies more than 2 dB per 10 degrees of azimuth
will not be authorized.