Yuri,
I don't think K3LR, W3LPL could afford that kind of property to begin with
plus they have to work and have families and all of that. It is nice to do
that kind of thing on DXPD's but I would not want to live there.
My final 2 cents....I vote we move on.
73 N7RT
----- Original Message -----
From: "Yuri Blanarovich" <k3bu@optimum.net>
To: <topband@contesting.com>
Sent: Tuesday, August 12, 2014 6:35 PM
Subject: Re: Topband: Modeling the proverbial "vertical on a beach"
On Tue, Aug 12, 2014 at 08:14 PM, Tom W8JI wrote:
>
----- Original Message ----- From: "Yuri Blanarovich" To: Sent: Tuesday,
August 12, 2014 4:50 PM
Subject: Re: Topband: Modeling the proverbial "vertical on a beach"
Oh, here comes the "guru" again. :-)
Is that immature stuff really necessary?
Subject of effect of ground, salt water front was discussed, some
experiences were mentioned, but you judge it "unnecessary" and "feelings".
We have been there before: first you don't believe it, deny it, then when
convinced that you were wrong, you go quiet for a while, and then you
"discover" the stuff and post article on your web site, like it was your
invention all along. I have been biting my pen, but sometimes stuff just
slips out. Looks like nothing new. Maybe there is a help by bringing it
up.
So, here we go again:
Unnecessary debate? We are talking about experiences and RESULTS of
comparing normal in land "ground" effect vs. salt water beach or
marshes. We are commenting on the benefit of immediate proximity of salt
water to antenna performance, especially on low angles.
K3BU and others found out that it is not "feeling," but S-meter readings
in order of 10 - 20 dB (RX and TX!) in favor of salty beach. It is like
driving inside into the amplifier
Perhaps you can explain why VOA and others willingly gave up that 10-20
dB, and how K3LR and W3LPL do so well inland, when they pay a 10-20 dB
penalty for communications?
Ask VOA engineers how they chose their locations. I see why WOO - RCA and
AT&T engineers chose their site in Ocean Gate, NJ on some 240 acres of
salty marshes, and how they dominated overseas comms.
K3LR and W3LPL knowingly chose inland sites, because they don't need extra
dBs? Comparing results to which beach station? Maybe operators have
something to do with it?
Using scores between comparable stations gives some indication. But the
real test is the observation of signals in said locations. Simple test of
driving around in the mobile demonstrates the effect. WRTC 2014
disqualified few sites because they were too good, they did the tests and
those too close for salty comfort were not used in order to keep things
more equal (for the inland locations that were available).
One would think if there was a 10-20 db penalty, it would show on
skimmers and that W2GD would be unbeatable being on the water. I'm sure
I'm missing something. What is it I am missing?
It is not penalty, it is advantage. It all depends how one takes advantage
of the effect and how good operator(s) are. You are missing getting into
the car, drive to Cape Hatteras and observe S-meter while driving close
to, or away from the salt water or over the bridges. You are also
overlooking experiences of experienced contesters commenting on the effect
and calling it unnecessary debate and feelings.
It is not easy to find beachfront property suitable for station, but it is
rewarding to get 10 - 20 dB on RX and TX for "free" if one can. I got
convinced and have seen the results and still have few records, even if
anecdotal from XJ3ZZ/1 St. Paul, from VE1ZZ, N2EE/4, TF4X, WOO site, etc.
Others have described their enhancements too, so it is not fairy tale.
Hope it helps.
Yuri, K3BU.us
Thanks, Tom
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