[BC] Inversion (was STL Options)
DANA PUOPOLO
dpuopolo
Thu Feb 23 14:35:16 CST 2006
I worked for the 106.3 here in Providence years ago. One day I got a call that
they were getting a 106.3 located north of them on their air monitor. The
output power of the TX was normal. I tuned in the station at my home and sure
enough heard Nashua NH like a local! As I was going out the door to head to
the TX, the manager called me back to let me know that a 106.3 in CT had
called them and they were getting OUR station on THEIR air monitor!
An hour later all had returned to normal...
-D
------ Original Message ------
Received: Thu, 23 Feb 2006 10:38:04 AM PST
From: DHultsman5 at aol.com
To: broadcast at radiolists.net
Subject: Re: [BC] STL Options
In a message dated 2/23/2006 11:31:10 AM Central Standard Time,
kwinrich at gmail.com writes:
You know that is one thing I have not looked into...the inversion
layers. I would think they would form at different levels, but
**typically** where do they form?
I have one station that has major fresenel issues in the summer
time. I need to look into this further.
******************
To really protect yourself from the inveerson layers it is wise to propose
dual receiving antennas at different levels. ie; 4 ft. dish at the higher
level and a 6 foot dish at about half the height. Moseley makes an
automoation switch and the newer receivers have built-in diversity
switching.
The inversion problems are very common along the Gulf Coasts of Texas thru
Florida.
I recall one station in Ft. Meyers that shared a 950 frequency with a
station in Tampa.
The transmitt beam was 90 degrees away from the patch to the Ft. Meyers
station. The typical Grid dish also had radiation off the sides + and - 90
degrees to the major as well as a significant amount off the back side.
In this case the inversion came in off the Gulf and the south side lobe of a
Tampa Rocker's morning crew was picked up by the religious station's STL
receiver between Ft. Meyers and Naples. The transmitter control was also
carried on the STL so they could not turn it off without going to the
transmitter.
That same morning Channel 6 in Orlando wiped out Channel 6 in Homstead in
moset of Broward and Dade counties. STL's all over the douthern half of the
state has problems with other signals and noise levels.
The new Backup audio CD players and harddrive systems loaded with your
format at the transmitter makes good sense in these cases. Especially if you
have
a dial up or TCP/IP remote control available.
Dave
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