"A Part 15 AM setup elevated above the earth, and having no conductors attached to it except a 3-meter whip would not have better range for the fact that it was elevated. This can be shown with NEC."
NEC may be an excellent emulation, but I would have to wonder if it takes certain variables into account such as residential terrain, flora, buildings made of diverse materials, and etc. I do not argue NEC shows no advantage to elevation for a 3 meter whip, but what sort of environment is actually being emulated? If it isn't programmed with the hundreds of variables such as trees and buildings in the near field of the antenna, then I would question if it can be accurate for predicting a precise picture of the radiation from the antenna in a given spot in the real world.
While NEC or any emulator might be very good at predicting behavior on a flat antenna field, few part15 stations are built on perfectly level and featureless areas. In residential areas, even soil conductivity could vary, considering one direction may be mostly pavement/blacktop while another could be largely trees and yet another direction might be mostly buildings.
I am not saying that those features would be likely to *help* a part15 AM signal. I would hypothesize that in all but a few random instances they would be detrimental to one degree or another. Elevating an antenna could minimize those losses somewhat, even though it would not be as much of a benefit as would be seen in getting an FM transmitter a few wavelengths above the surface of the earth.
In my own experiments, I've noted that the receiver being uphill vs downhill in relation to the transmitter consistently makes a difference, and the "downhill" range is nearly always better. Interestingly, one of the *worst* results I've gotten with the experiments was with the transmitter and antenna at ground level. Even in the basement, where the antenna and transmitter were both entirely below ground level gave a better range. In all my experiments at this stage, there is no ground wire or etc in use. Battery power for the transmitter and the small FM receiver used as an STL, and the antenna rig has a nonconductive base and the whole rig can be picked up and moved around and set on the ground, in the basement, in different rooms, on accessible parts of the roof, etc. The best results so far with the experimental rig have been with the antenna in the attic, which would be 3rd floor elevation.
But even moving the test apparatus as little as 5 ft to one side or another sometimes has resulted in the signal being clear for an additional 10-20 meters in a some directions.
I am not saying that NEC isn't a fine emulator. I've never used such software, but I've gained enough respect for Rich's knowlege over the past couple years to be confident that he wouldn't be using it if it wasn't one of the best emulators. But *any* emulation has it's limits and in residential installations of very low powered antenna/transmitter systems, I would question whether it takes enough variables into account for it's conclusion that there can be *no* advantage in different elevations or lateral positions for the placement of a transmitter/antenna system.
Daniel