Shockwave said:
Richard did teach me something with the canceling of downward radiation in CP. Thank you!
You're welcome, and thanks for saying so.
I still suspect it's lower in VP without the need to cancel.
Suspicions and intuition are useful, to a certain point. An accurate mathematical evaluation supported with unbiased field experience and measurements are even better.
Analysis using Numerical Electromagnetics Code (NEC) shows that the c-pol elements I referred to have the same free-space elevation patterns as a vertical, center-fed, 1/2-wave dipole. All of these configurations show
zero elevation pattern field at +/-90 degrees. But due to re-radiation from the supporting tower and its contents -- none of these radiator designs achieves this in practice.
Anyone wishing to investigate this might want to download one of the NEC programs available, construct and analyze the radiation performance of suitable models, and determine this for themselves.
Otherwise the antenna engineering textbooks of Kraus, Balanis, and Johnson/Jasik will lead to the same conclusion.
Also please note that US FM and TV stations are not permitted to use
only vertical polarization without prior authorization from the FCC.
If you are able to compare a single CP bay against a single VP without changing any other variables, it will become clear to you also that VP provides the largest coverage area.
Your quote above is from a later post of yours, but you should have qualified it to apply to receiver systems responding only to v-pol transmissions. Not all FM receiver systems do so.
This is a moot point in any case, because the FCC licenses analog FM/TV broadcast stations for a given ERP
per polarization, whether that is comprised of the H & V components of a c-pol system, or is linearly-polarized H or V.
So such a v-pol (only) transmit antenna has no greater coverage area to a receive system responding only to v-pol transmissions than if it was c-pol, other things equal.
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