J
JasonW
Guest
Hello All,
I know the staffs of radio stations in Florida and surrounding areas are busily preparing for the possible arrival of Hurricane Wilma. I wanted to suggest something that would allow these stations to remain on the air even if their towers and/or generators are destroyed by the storm.
A Part 15 AM transmitter can be run off a car's battery or alternator (using a cigarette lighter adapter), and if a full-size 1/4 wavelength or 1/2 wavelength wire antenna is used (held up by mylar balloons or a tall building), even its 0.1 watt signal can cover several square miles. A 1/2 wavelength wire antenna would require only a ground rod to function effectively and would have a low angle of radiation, and it would need only a simple L-Match ATU that could be made in minutes from an AM pocket radio ferrite loopstick and a small variable capacitor. Part 15 AM transmitters such as the InfoMAX http://www.theradiosource.com/products-infomax.htm , Talking House www.talkinghouse.com and www.actradio.com , and TalkingSign www.talkingsign.com are ideal for this application. They have microphones and built-in auto-repeat 5 minute non-volatile flash audio memories that can broadcast repeating public service messages. While the FCC Part 15 AM rules prohibit total antenna + antenna feed (if any) + ground lead lengths greater than 3 meters, I'm certain that rule would be waived in a disaster situation, especially if all full-power licensed stations in a community were knocked off the air.
I hope this information will be helpful. -- J. Jason Wentworth
I know the staffs of radio stations in Florida and surrounding areas are busily preparing for the possible arrival of Hurricane Wilma. I wanted to suggest something that would allow these stations to remain on the air even if their towers and/or generators are destroyed by the storm.
A Part 15 AM transmitter can be run off a car's battery or alternator (using a cigarette lighter adapter), and if a full-size 1/4 wavelength or 1/2 wavelength wire antenna is used (held up by mylar balloons or a tall building), even its 0.1 watt signal can cover several square miles. A 1/2 wavelength wire antenna would require only a ground rod to function effectively and would have a low angle of radiation, and it would need only a simple L-Match ATU that could be made in minutes from an AM pocket radio ferrite loopstick and a small variable capacitor. Part 15 AM transmitters such as the InfoMAX http://www.theradiosource.com/products-infomax.htm , Talking House www.talkinghouse.com and www.actradio.com , and TalkingSign www.talkingsign.com are ideal for this application. They have microphones and built-in auto-repeat 5 minute non-volatile flash audio memories that can broadcast repeating public service messages. While the FCC Part 15 AM rules prohibit total antenna + antenna feed (if any) + ground lead lengths greater than 3 meters, I'm certain that rule would be waived in a disaster situation, especially if all full-power licensed stations in a community were knocked off the air.
I hope this information will be helpful. -- J. Jason Wentworth