Hamilton said:I found the there was very little radiation from a longer ground, it was basically the height that contributed to increased signal. Such a short radiator is a point source at that low frequency.
These beliefs are popular among Part 15 AM equipment suppliers and operators, but they are not supported either by theoretical physics, or decades of field experience.
Here is a quote from Radio Engineer's Handbook by F. E. Terman, 1st Editon, page 799, in the section about grounded vertical radiators:
"When the length of the grounded antenna is of the order of one-eighth wave or less, the radiation is almost exactly proportional to the cosine of the angle of elevation."
The 3-m whip portion of a Part 15 AM antenna system is much shorter than one-eighth of a wavelength even at 1700 kHz, so we can construct a short table showing its relative field in the vertical plane:
Elevation Angle = Relative Field [cos(angle)]
0 deg = 1.000 (always maximum radiation in the horizontal plane)
15 deg = 0.966
30 deg = 0.866
45 deg = 0.707
60 deg = 0.500
75 deg = 0.259
90 deg = 0.000 (always zero radiation toward the zenith, directly above the radiator)
These characteristic patterns also can be seen in paper 3 at http://rfry.org/Software%20&%20Misc%20Papers.htm (figure on page 3).
Conclusion: these electrically short antennas are far from being point sources.
Adding a long, vertical ground lead/conductor to a Part 15 AM tx+whip extends the radiating length of the antenna system. All of the r-f current that exists at the base of the elevated 3-m whip flows along that "ground" path at about the same value as at the base of the 3-m section. The flow of r-f current along the ground wire makes it radiate, just as that current makes the 3-m whip radiate. This can be seen in the figures on pages 1 and 2 of the paper referred to above.
So it is the added radiation from the ground conductor of an elevated Part 15 AM system that produces the increase in signal strength/coverage radius, not because the 3-m whip is an isolated point source, which when elevated has better line of sight paths to nearby receivers. The majority of the radiation from such systems occurs from the ground lead, not the whip. A well-designed and impartial measurement will prove this.
Hamilton said:Some of the finer points of the engineering could be debated for decades. (I don’t enjoy that sort of thing).
What we are discussing here are not fine points that are open to debate. They are fundamental to physics, and to an understanding of how Part 15 AM systems operate.
Anyone, but especially a Part 15 AM tx manufacturer wanting to provide accurate information about the installation and operation of Part 15 AM systems should not dismiss them, and offer advice to the contrary -- which only misleads others, and may lead to FCC problems for those readers (at least).
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