Supersound wrote:
> Experimental evidence shows elevating the entire antenna
> above ground, reduces ground losses, so that a marginal
> ground system, introduces less loss. This is only logical
> since the induced current in the (soil) ground is less. The
> farther away from the antenna, the less loss.
________________
Engineering analysis shows that radiation from an elevated 3-meter Part 15 AM antenna is not confined to the ~3-meter section above the tx.
The entire length of the conducting path ("ground lead" + "ground wire" and/or flagpole/tower/whatever) from the tx chassis to the ground plane at physical earth carries the same maximum r-f current present at the bottom of the 3-meter section. And because the conducting path to the ground plane typically is longer than 3 meters, it produces more radiation than the 3-meter section above it. This can be confirmed in any good antenna engineering textbook.
The r-f current is almost uniform in the conducting path from the tx chassis to the ground plane at physical earth. And so elevating the tx and the 3-meter section has not reduced radiation toward the ground, it has increased it. The belief that an elevated Part 15 tx+antenna system has lower ground losses than one mounted on the ground is the opposite of physical reality.
Elevated Part 15 AM systems do radiate greater fields than those at ground level, but the reason is not due to reduced ground loss -- it is because the effective length of the antenna system, then, is longer than 3 meters.
--
(I keep repeating this information here because of continuing posts showing the need for it.)
//
> Experimental evidence shows elevating the entire antenna
> above ground, reduces ground losses, so that a marginal
> ground system, introduces less loss. This is only logical
> since the induced current in the (soil) ground is less. The
> farther away from the antenna, the less loss.
________________
Engineering analysis shows that radiation from an elevated 3-meter Part 15 AM antenna is not confined to the ~3-meter section above the tx.
The entire length of the conducting path ("ground lead" + "ground wire" and/or flagpole/tower/whatever) from the tx chassis to the ground plane at physical earth carries the same maximum r-f current present at the bottom of the 3-meter section. And because the conducting path to the ground plane typically is longer than 3 meters, it produces more radiation than the 3-meter section above it. This can be confirmed in any good antenna engineering textbook.
The r-f current is almost uniform in the conducting path from the tx chassis to the ground plane at physical earth. And so elevating the tx and the 3-meter section has not reduced radiation toward the ground, it has increased it. The belief that an elevated Part 15 tx+antenna system has lower ground losses than one mounted on the ground is the opposite of physical reality.
Elevated Part 15 AM systems do radiate greater fields than those at ground level, but the reason is not due to reduced ground loss -- it is because the effective length of the antenna system, then, is longer than 3 meters.
--
(I keep repeating this information here because of continuing posts showing the need for it.)
//