OKCRadioGuy said:
The key might be the number of bays. The one here in OKC has a ton of elements/gain. That probably contributes to some nulls.
True, and a good observation.
Just to note that there will be far less possibility of self-interference to the analog signal caused by the digital signal in/near those nulls in the coverage area of the analog signal if the polarizations of the azimuth and elevation patterns, and the radiation centers of the co-located A&D transmit antennas essentially are equal.
The simplest way to accomplish this is to use the same antenna to radiate the A&D signals.
Collinear, interleaved A&D transmit antennas having essentially the same az-el radiation patterns and radiation centers should approximate that result.
Separate A&D transmit antennas using different numbers of bays and bay spacings, and/or with radiation centers at different elevations even on the same tower may produce wide variation in the A-D ratio at some receive sites, causing interference to the analog signal by the digital signal. Of course that can be an issue, because far more listeners now use the analog signal than the digital signal.
Using separate "c-pol" A&D transmit antennas with opposite polarization sense (left-hand vs. right-hand) probably will improve their decoupling, and thus reduce the hardware cost needed for that station to meet the spectrum mask required by the FCC for A+D FM stations.
But using such transmit antenna configurations may or may not reduce the potential of digital signal interference in the nulls of the analog signal
at the receivers in those locations.