Re: [IRCA] [NRC-AM] Recent DXpedition to Grayland, WA & Florence, OR
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Re: [IRCA] [NRC-AM] Recent DXpedition to Grayland, WA & Florence, OR



Hi Bill,

<<< I think it's really hard to 'compare' what Gary's able to hear on a small portable radio with a super cool FSL antenna with what I do via a Perseus & DKAZ. Somehow I give him several 'bonus points' just for doing what he does LIVE, with cars whoosing by and a few hundred feet above the pounding surf while I'm literally sleeping! Now that I've been to where Gary did his last DXpedition I'm VERY impressed. I would not do what he does. I might visit Sea Lion Caves down the road but I would NOT stand out there with a portable radio and a FSL and cars
whooshing by at sunrise!   >>>

Thanks very much for your comments! I'm still waiting for the Discovery Channel to make me an offer for a new reality TV Show-- "Deadliest DX Catch."

73, Gary


-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Whitacre <bw@xxxxxxx>
To: Mailing list for the International Radio Club of America <irca@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: d1028gary <d1028gary@xxxxxxx>
Sent: Tue, Aug 7, 2012 3:12 pm
Subject: Re: [IRCA] [NRC-AM] Recent DXpedition to Grayland, WA & Florence, OR



On Aug 7, 2012, at 4:14 PM, Nick Hall-Patch wrote:

I suspect that the Florence location suffered somewhat from being
1000 feet
inland, Gary and Bill. My limited experience has been that you're
generally
better off being right at the coast for the best DX, although Gary's
experience
seems to point to an advantage to being right at the coast and higher
up, and
that phenomenon certainly needs to be looked at more carefully.

That's almost what I blurted out in my original email -- what Gary [and others' research to understand it] may have stumbled upon is the true nature of 'sea gain' or 'coastal effect' and that it falls off REALLY rapidly away from the
coast whether you're at sea level or elevated.

I think it's really hard to 'compare' what Gary's able to hear on a small portable radio with a super cool FSL antenna with what I do via a Perseus & DKAZ. Somehow I give him several 'bonus points' just for doing what he does LIVE, with cars whoosing by and a few hundred feet above the pounding surf while
I'm literally sleeping!  Now that I've been to where Gary did his last
DXpedition I'm VERY impressed.  I would not do what he does.

I might visit Sea Lion Caves down the road but I would NOT stand out there with a portable radio and a FSL and cars whooshing by at sunrise! For that alone he
deserves a '10' on the Olympics scale.

There was a research paper done years ago by the BBC, I believe,
showing the
"coastal effect" as a wavefront moved from the water to the land, and
although
there were peaks in signal strength as one moved inland, their
location
depended
on the frequency of the received signal, were compensated for by
lower signal
strength in the area between the peaks, and, overall signal strength
dropped
the
further inland one went. I'll look it up again when I'm home; I
have a vague
recollection that cliffs might have been incidentally involved,
though I don't
think that clifftop vs. seashore was investigated.

I've seen that paper and know some people who had something to do with it ... assuming they're still alive. It was incorporated, in some fashion, into the Rio 1979 Final Acts where the Region 1 & 3 MW stuff was negotiated/allocated. I remember once writing a TI-59 'program' to calculate desired and undesired signals along radials using the 'Rio Plan.' Had to see if changes we wanted to make to VOA MW facilities would affect Rss by more than 0.5 dB -- the limit to
having other admins notified!

Blah, blah, blah ... that's when people still gave a hoot about AM and HF. :-(

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