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Re: lake ground?
Original poster: "Jim Lux by way of Terry Fritz <teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>" <jimlux-at-earthlink-dot-net>
Subject: Re: lake ground?
> Original poster: "Ed Phillips by way of Terry Fritz <teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>"
<evp-at-pacbell-dot-net>
> > Original poster: "Jerry Chamkis by way of Terry Fritz
> <teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>" <jchamkis-at-bga-dot-com>
> >
> > there was an AM radio station on Catalina Island that had wire mesh in
the
> > (salt) water for their ground. They had a -famously- strong signal.
Might
> > be irrelevant though- sea water is presumably orders of magnitude more
> > conductive than fresh...
> Since the beginning of "wireless" commercial stations, both radio and
> communication, have always attempted to use salt water marshes for their
> antenna siting. I suspect that even "lake water" is conductive enough
> to help and that anything on the bottom would have enough local mineral
> contaminiation to help quite a bit.
>
Hence the popularity of the Salton Sea as a 160m contest site..
But anyway, the high conductivity ground (salt marsh on the top of a hill
type sites) is mostly for far field propagation... I don't know that it
would make all that much difference for a TC.. most of the field in a TC is
the E field in the capacitor formed by the topload and the ground. It's the
ground conductivity in the adjacent area ( radius approximately equal to
topload height) of the TC that's important from that standpoint. A 10 foot
square of chicken wire is probably the ne plus ultra.