Timewarp said:
Guys! Even the full power AM stations have trouble being received clearly in today's noisy
RF environment. And I'm talking about just a few miles from the transmitter.
Yes with a super radio, in a corn field, with a good ground and long wire, you might be able to hear a part 15 station miles away.
But, your next door neighor won't hear you clearly, if a tv is on, a computer is running, if he has
a power supply plugged in, a light dimmer switch, a microwave, a motor running, or numerous
other things.
The government is hearing the people and the winds of change are in the air. Those who make
an attempt will get things done while you sit here and debate how to hook up one tenth watt
into 10 feet of antenna. Wow! Wow! Bye now!
People who have chosen to create and live in an RF pigstye don't
DESERVE to receive AM signals.
The FCC, having permitted, practically INVITED all the noisemakers you mention, renders itself irrelevant.
Inasmuch as the FCC does not even respect its own rules regarding pt 15, haven't the pt 15 intentional radiator rules become irrelevant?
Why should there be ANY concern over intentional radiation when properly engineered and operated, when absolutely no
concern has been given to the pt 15 unintentional radiators?
Explain why it's OK to let random RF pollution fly free, but then require intentional radiators to comply.
When was the last time you heard about a boatload of crappy light dimmers being turned away at the port because they don't in any way comply with pt 15 regs?
Every day the FCC does not address the interference they were incepted to prevent, they become more and more irrelevant.
It reminds me of the famous quote from Chicago's mayor Daley ( the father of the current mayor).
"The policeman is not there to prevent disorder; (splutter) the policeman is there to
preserve disorder."
How true this seems in so many ways about the FCC.
When was the last time the FCC did anything to really help the RF environment?
I wouldn't even trust the FCC to watch my beer while I went to the restroom.
R. Fry said:
Tom Wells said:
Returning to the topic of vertical monopole/radial radiation and cancellation, ... I was truly enjoying the debate over this. It's too bad we came to an impasse. Can anyone else support this position or offer another explanation for the seeming disagreement between radiation/cancellation?
___________
Hi Tom,
Buried radials reduce I^2R losses for the r-f currents induced in the earth via radiation from a nearby vertical monopole antenna system. For best radiation efficiency these r-f currents need to be returned to the transmission system.
Other things equal, more and longer buried radials will increase the tx power available for radiation by a monopole antenna system. This is the conclusion based on calculated and measured data by RCA broadcast engineers (George Brown, et al) going back to 1937, and proven by many 1000s of accurate, real-world field strength measurements with calibrated field strength meters ever since. Of course, all antenna engineering textbook and accurate NEC analyses also support this.
A vertical monopole and its complete conducting path to a true r-f ground reference (not just the short wire defined by some as the Part 15 AM "ground lead") are the only source of useful radiation from such a system. They radiate a uniform field strength in all horizontal directions, whether using 1 or 120 buried radials, or just a ground rod or two. The only difference is that a monopole system with more/longer radials will generate a greater absolute groundwave field strength at a given distance, and will do so in all compass directions (again, other things equal).
Elevated radials behave differently. Any symmetric set of 2 or more radials about 1/4-wave long each, when used at the base of a vertical MW monopole, and elevated 15 feet or so above the earth will produce about the same result as that same vertical monopole used with 120 buried radials, each about 1/4-wave long. And again, antenna engineering textbooks, and NEC analyses support this.
Engineering documentation references are available on request.
The FCC position for Part 15 AM users with respect to the elevated radial configurations given above is unknown -- so due care is needed by everyone wanting to try it.
Part15 AM rules may appear to be "simple," but the real science behind these systems is not.
Rich
Then maybe what is in contention here is just where the radials lie in relation to the true RF ground.
Most locations are somewhat less than ideal, the true RF ground is often well below the radials.
Radials in ground with good conductivity will be able to collect returning induced ground currents efficiently.
For those with less than ideal radial-to-RF ground situations, might there not be some cancellations and apparent
directionality? You do specify that symmetric counterpoise systems are omindirectional in pattern.
Does loss of symmetry result in less than omnidirectional radiation?
I do not intend to argue but am adressing the issue of why real world results often fall short of calculated results.
I have no argument with the proven results of the tried-and-true.
Wouldn't radials in less-than-ideal soils behave somewhere in between the counterpoise and perfect RF ground-and-radial systems?