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Re: [TowerTalk] New N6LF Ground Probe Designs

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] New N6LF Ground Probe Designs
From: Jim Brown <jim@audiosystemsgroup.com>
Reply-to: jim@audiosystemsgroup.com
Date: Sat, 2 Mar 2024 13:39:57 -0800
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
On 3/2/2024 12:10 PM, Brian Beezley wrote:
I should point out the the FCC ground conductivity map is generally not useful for hams. It applies to the AM broadcast band only, not to HF. It does not show ground permittivity. Both conductivity and permittivity influence antenna performance and both can vary greatly greatly with frequency. In addition, the resolution of the map is way too coarse to be useful. For example, on the BC band where the map is supposed to be valid, Rudy measured ground conductivity 4-5 times higher at his QTH than the map indicates. In this case the map is highly misleading.

The FCC map is ancient -- I'm guessing late '40s-'50s. It's also rather coarse-grained. Development is the enemy of good soil conductivity.

To the extent that it's accurate or not out of date, I would expect the map to be a decent first approximation on 160M for assessing a vertical antenna's possible radiation efficiency in areas that are reasonably homogeneous, but close to meaningless in areas that are well-developed. By this I mean the extent to which soil in the far field does or does not attenuate or reinforce the direct signal to result in strong low-angle field strength. Simply put -- if the map shows high conductivity, verticals have a good shot at being effective, if low conductivity, try to rig horizontal antennas as high as practical.

A serious radial system can minimize loss for a vertical antenna's return current.

Extensive modeling studies have shown that while horizontal antenna impedance characteristics are dependent on the soil underneath them, their radiation efficiency and vertical pattern are almost entirely dependent on their height and on ground slope. In the last decade, N6BT has done work to show that the field strength and vertical pattern of vertical antennas is strongly dependent on ground slope.

73, Jim K9YC



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