J
JasonW
Guest
Hello All,
There is a 320 foot tall AM radio tower (once used by a now-defunct radio station) near me.
The Part 15.209 AM rules, unlike the alternative Part 15.219 AM rules, do not specify a maximum antenna length, but go by Field Strength. For 490 kHz - 1705 kHz, the maximum allowed Field Strength (in microvolts/meter) is 24,000/F(kHz) as measured 30 meters from the antenna.
The tower is a half-wavelength tall at about 1460 kHz and would radiate at over 90% efficiency at that frequency and at nearby frequencies. The tower's ground radial system is largely intact, although radials are less important for voltage-fed, end-fed high-impedance half-wavelength antennas.
Has anyone ever tried using a full-size tower at Part 15 AM output power? (Some AM stations effectively broadcast with as little as 1 watt at night.) Also, what Field Strength Meter(s) could be used to determine Part 15.209 rules compliance (most FSMs won't give accurate readings at such low field intensities)?
Operated as a half-wavelength vertical antenna, the tower would have a low angle of radiation and its signal should reach several miles even at Part 15 AM power levels. There's plenty of room in the tower's ATU "doghouse" for a Talking House or TalkingSign Part 15 AM transmitter and a parallel-tuned LC matching network to match the transmitter's output impedance to the tower.
-- Jason
There is a 320 foot tall AM radio tower (once used by a now-defunct radio station) near me.
The Part 15.209 AM rules, unlike the alternative Part 15.219 AM rules, do not specify a maximum antenna length, but go by Field Strength. For 490 kHz - 1705 kHz, the maximum allowed Field Strength (in microvolts/meter) is 24,000/F(kHz) as measured 30 meters from the antenna.
The tower is a half-wavelength tall at about 1460 kHz and would radiate at over 90% efficiency at that frequency and at nearby frequencies. The tower's ground radial system is largely intact, although radials are less important for voltage-fed, end-fed high-impedance half-wavelength antennas.
Has anyone ever tried using a full-size tower at Part 15 AM output power? (Some AM stations effectively broadcast with as little as 1 watt at night.) Also, what Field Strength Meter(s) could be used to determine Part 15.209 rules compliance (most FSMs won't give accurate readings at such low field intensities)?
Operated as a half-wavelength vertical antenna, the tower would have a low angle of radiation and its signal should reach several miles even at Part 15 AM power levels. There's plenty of room in the tower's ATU "doghouse" for a Talking House or TalkingSign Part 15 AM transmitter and a parallel-tuned LC matching network to match the transmitter's output impedance to the tower.