Sorry to hijack the thread, but Lawppy's idea of just leaving your stereo on a given frequency planted another idea in my head...
For a moment, I entertained a similar idea with respect to 87.9... which seems to be the channel of choice for various low-powered modulators (to relay XM, Sirius, iPods, etc.) I'd heard stories of 100-watt community stations and 50-watt translators occasionally making tropo and e-skip hops (though I've never been lucky enough to experience it myself), and those got me to wondering whether there's any rock-bottom minimum power to get a signal up into a tropo duct, or at the very least some interdependency between the power level and the
likelihood of the signal doing anything DX-wise.
Presumably, the little store-bought modulators would be out of the question, even on a frequency like 87.9 that's free of high-powered stations... because they can only go 100 or 120 feet in ANY direction, including skyward, before becoming undetectable on a receiver. (The one I purchased specced its current consumption on the box... which, in combination with the battery voltage and a circuit efficiency estimate, allowed me to calculate its output power as being around 18 milliwatts.) BUT... three questions remain...
1) Do there exist any tropo-
like conditions that may affect propagation on an extremely localized level... e.g. that might cut down on environmental path loss, or even create "mini-ducts" in air much nearer the ground, so that a low-powered modulator might throw a detectable signal for 300' instead of the usual 100'? (Related thought -- in the wonderful world o' physics
theory, radio signals are supposed to follow the inverse-square law, but to what degree is that observed in reality? Let's say the signal from your modulator becomes functionally undetectable on a car receiver at 30 dBu or so... meaning that arithmetically, it's still about 32 times as strong as the one-microvolt standard comparison signal. Would this weak, noise-floor kind of signal actually travel 5.6 times as far as the signal your receiver can detect? And if so, might you see the occasional day where even a locally originated 0 dBu signal becomes detectable, allowing the modulator signals to come in, say, 600 feet away?)
and, of more practical interest, 2) If someone who bore a striking resemblance to Grrrradio decided to jerry-rig a Ramsey to run a watt out of his car's cigarette lighter, and use THAT to modulate his iPod on 87.9... would there be ANY chance whatsoever of that 1-watt signal making it through a tropo duct or even getting e-skipped over to, say, Texarkana from Minneapolis? ;D