So apparently using the dBu meter on my PL-380 isn't accurate enough. I'm not expecting perfection, though. I just want to be able to see that I'm indicating X dBu at Y meters, and know that I'm probably somewhere close to 250uV/m @ 3 meters (on FM), and be assured that it's not, say, 1uV/m @ 3cm, or 500mV/m @ 3km, for example.
Basically, I'm wanting to periodically transmit analog audio - a few hours at a time, once every few days or weeks or so. Is there any band that can be tuned on the Tecsun PL-380 (153-513kHz, 520-1710kHz, 2300-21950kHz, 64-108MHz) for which I can have a legal part 15 signal that will go over the horizon, without having to use an antenna longer than 3-4 inches, or a transmitter larger than 2 decks of cards? One of the reasons I picked 13.56MHz was due to the 15,848mV/m @ 30m field strength limit. (I do not intend to transmit via groundwave at that frequency - it'd either be skywave or direct wave.) I wish I could use the 160-190kHz band or the AM band in 15.219, but unfortunately there seems to be no provision in the rules for increasing transmitter power to compensate for a much smaller antenna than the legal limit. For example, if I was operating on 180kHz, the field strength limit would be 2400/180 = 13.33 uV/m @ 300 meters. (Not factoring in ground losses, I understand that field strength voltage is halved when doubling the distance.) Considering that, under that provision, the field strength over some distances I might want to cover may be something like 139.84547 nV/m (nanovolts) twice a week (for a few hours each time), 23.5538 nV/m twice a month (for several hours each time), or 9.0678 nV/m twice a year (for a few days each time). (That's assuming that the field strength voltage drops in half each time you double the distance, which obviously does not take ground losses into account.) I believe that... A - my Tecsun PL-380 is not sensitive enough to pick up signals that weak at 180kHz, and B - even if it was, those signals would be well below atmospheric noise levels.
Is there another solution?
Basically, I'm wanting to periodically transmit analog audio - a few hours at a time, once every few days or weeks or so. Is there any band that can be tuned on the Tecsun PL-380 (153-513kHz, 520-1710kHz, 2300-21950kHz, 64-108MHz) for which I can have a legal part 15 signal that will go over the horizon, without having to use an antenna longer than 3-4 inches, or a transmitter larger than 2 decks of cards? One of the reasons I picked 13.56MHz was due to the 15,848mV/m @ 30m field strength limit. (I do not intend to transmit via groundwave at that frequency - it'd either be skywave or direct wave.) I wish I could use the 160-190kHz band or the AM band in 15.219, but unfortunately there seems to be no provision in the rules for increasing transmitter power to compensate for a much smaller antenna than the legal limit. For example, if I was operating on 180kHz, the field strength limit would be 2400/180 = 13.33 uV/m @ 300 meters. (Not factoring in ground losses, I understand that field strength voltage is halved when doubling the distance.) Considering that, under that provision, the field strength over some distances I might want to cover may be something like 139.84547 nV/m (nanovolts) twice a week (for a few hours each time), 23.5538 nV/m twice a month (for several hours each time), or 9.0678 nV/m twice a year (for a few days each time). (That's assuming that the field strength voltage drops in half each time you double the distance, which obviously does not take ground losses into account.) I believe that... A - my Tecsun PL-380 is not sensitive enough to pick up signals that weak at 180kHz, and B - even if it was, those signals would be well below atmospheric noise levels.
Is there another solution?