Kmagrill said:
...The coverage is, theoretically, identical between the two. In practice, the higher HAAT can actually be more effective in some situations, particularly where the area to be served is relatively vast and the structure density is low.
The ERP of an FM station whose antenna radiation center exceeds the HAAT permitted for their Class must be reduced so that the distance to its 60 dB(µV/m) field intensity is the same as produced by a station using the maximum power for that class from the maximum HAAT defined for that Class and power.
But there are differences in the signal levels of the two installations.
The link below leads to a graphic showing that the signal strength from the system with reduced ERP is not quite as high from the antenna site out to about 5 miles (in this case) as one with full ERP. This can be an issue for building penetration where the antenna site is in the center of a major city.
But the mitigation for that is that an FM station with reduced ERP, and suitable radiation patterns in the vertical plane will produce less multipath distortion in analog FM receivers in that zone than a full-power station located away from the city center.
This was the case for the FMs on Sears (Willis) Tower in Chicago, who all use single-bay Harris CBR antennas having no nulls in their elevation patterns except at +/- 90 degrees.
In the graphic it can be seen that the close-in field of the 6-bay antenna is starting to drop at 1 mile, and between the antenna site and 1 mile it would contain 5 nulls, or zones where signals would be very low, and susceptible to multipath interference.
http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h85/rfry-100/CoverageCompare.gif
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