The following was written in response to a private message I received from an R-I site member. While I have already answered him privately, I thought that the response might be of general interest.
Discussion/comments invited.
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Yes, you are correct: increasing the r-f current flowing along any/all sections of a conductor increases the radiation from that conductor. And a long conductor carrying the same current as a short one produces more radiation than the short one.
If the current distribution was linear along a basic 3-m whip instead of being triangular (as it is), then the field intensity gain of the whip itself would increase by 3 dB. A linear current distribution can be approximated by capacitance loading of the whip with two or more symmetrically arranged, horizontal wires electrically connected to the top of the basic whip, and insulated from an r-f ground at their far ends. The FCC's view of this with respect to 15.219(b) could be a problem, though.
However adding length to the functional "ground lead" can add much more than 3 dB gain to an antenna system consisting of a basic 3-m whip mounted with its base at/near the surface of the earth. Again, this approach may not pass an FCC inspection for compliance with 15.219(b) -- and purely as a matter of physics, it doesn't. The FCC has issued citations to operators using such configurations, however according to posts on these boards there are many more such setups that the FCC has not cited.
To summarize the main factors affecting "Part 15" AM system efficiency on any given frequency, ~ in order of importance ...
Further contributors to system performance are the conductivity and dielectric constant of the earth along the propagation path to the receiver -- but generally these are beyond the control of the operator.
Each of the above topics could be expanded into several pages of text and graphics. In some cases that already has been done, and posted on several Part 15 boards over the last few years.
If "Googling" doesn't locate them then I may be able either to re-post the papers themselves, or link them to this thread.
Happy New Year, everybody.
//
Discussion/comments invited.
____________
Yes, you are correct: increasing the r-f current flowing along any/all sections of a conductor increases the radiation from that conductor. And a long conductor carrying the same current as a short one produces more radiation than the short one.
If the current distribution was linear along a basic 3-m whip instead of being triangular (as it is), then the field intensity gain of the whip itself would increase by 3 dB. A linear current distribution can be approximated by capacitance loading of the whip with two or more symmetrically arranged, horizontal wires electrically connected to the top of the basic whip, and insulated from an r-f ground at their far ends. The FCC's view of this with respect to 15.219(b) could be a problem, though.
However adding length to the functional "ground lead" can add much more than 3 dB gain to an antenna system consisting of a basic 3-m whip mounted with its base at/near the surface of the earth. Again, this approach may not pass an FCC inspection for compliance with 15.219(b) -- and purely as a matter of physics, it doesn't. The FCC has issued citations to operators using such configurations, however according to posts on these boards there are many more such setups that the FCC has not cited.
To summarize the main factors affecting "Part 15" AM system efficiency on any given frequency, ~ in order of importance ...
- The quality of the impedance match between the transmitter output circuits and the antenna system feedpoint impedance
- The amount of r-f power that the final r-f stage of the transmitter can deliver into the impedance match it "sees"
- The net r-f resistance of the functional r-f ground(s) in use (something buried in the earth, typically)
- The r-f resistance of the network used to match the transmitter output impedance to the antenna system input impedance
- The amount, and distribution of the r-f current flowing on the conducting wires/paths connected to and leading away from the transmitter terminals, such as
- the 3-m whip
- the "ground lead"
- the "safety ground" and/or the grounded structure used to support the transmitter and 3-m whip, and
- the conductors used to supply audio and d-c power to the transmitter
Further contributors to system performance are the conductivity and dielectric constant of the earth along the propagation path to the receiver -- but generally these are beyond the control of the operator.
Each of the above topics could be expanded into several pages of text and graphics. In some cases that already has been done, and posted on several Part 15 boards over the last few years.
If "Googling" doesn't locate them then I may be able either to re-post the papers themselves, or link them to this thread.
Happy New Year, everybody.
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