BobOnTheJob said:
Do I understand that the goal is to reduce the amount of tropo ducting to reduce interference to distant stations? Short of having the distant station alert you that the duct is in place, how would you even know that you were creating interference? And short of being a good neighbor, what would possess you to reduce your own bread & butter coverage to possibly minimize your impact on a market hundreds of miles away? And how would you know when the duct shut down? Do you really think that the lack of listener complaints for X number of minutes will cause the interfered with station to alert you that the coast is clear & to go back to normal facilities?
I don't think that's the goal.
I think what they're getting at is... that if *your* antenna is in or above the duct, *your* signal will be conducted through the duct. Some of your power will be wasted, being delivered to another market & causing interference there, instead of serving listeners within your own market. That's a bit simplistic but is the general idea.
In other words, it's not about preventing someone else from propagating into your market, but about keeping your signal stronger so the interference from someone else doesn't cause as much trouble.
I'm in TV -- back when we used to receive the network signals via terrestrial microwave, there were two sets of dishes at different elevations. During severe tropo events, the microwave signal was deflected into the other dish..