[Antennas] Altitude
James Duffer
dufferjames at hotmail.com
Wed May 14 10:56:58 EDT 2008
Seems that I've heard that there are things called Freznel zones. These zones cause a signal that is being received from a fixed transmitting source to vary with height. That the signal strength will be stronger at some points and weaker at other points in height. Of course this probably would be significant in fixed point to point communications, and not too important in ham radio. I have seen demonstrated where signal strength was greater at a lower height for microwave antennas. There is also the "knife edge" effect where a signal is actually bent by a mountain ridge and results in a stronger signal at a lower height.
73, Jim, wd4air
>
> The higher location, will be better on the VHF and UHF bands. Line of
> sight is line of sight, and any height advantage pushes that radio
> horizon that much further out.
>
> BUT
>
> On HF, there would be minimal at best differences of these two
> locations. Performance on HF is determined mostly by ground
> conductivity, and the very near field area around the antenna. Here the
> height of the tower and the surrounding immediate area make 99% of the
> difference.
> >
> >Say I am surrounded by level ground for miles in all directions and there are no obstructions. I have a tower with a vertical on top and elevated radials at whatever the magical length and number is the greatest. My altitude is 600 feet above some standard reference (mean sea level if they haven't changed the name for that too).
> >
> >I have another location that is identical but the Altitude if 1600 feet.
> >
> >WHY is it that the one that is at the higher altitude is supposed to be so much greater of a location than the other as far as performance is concerned? (I just heard it again - First guy says - I am at 8xx ft and the next guy pipes up proudly and BOASTS that he is at 12xx ft like 800 is a horrible place to be).
More information about the Antennas
mailing list