| ▲ | reaperducer 6 hours ago | |
Is that emitted power, consumed power, or effective radiated power? Without knowing that, your power calculations have no meaning. Radio stations are usually measured by the last of those: Effective radiated power. You can have a radio station with a 50,000 watt ERP, but running only a 2,500 watt transmitter. For FM radio stations, it's all about the height of the transmitter above average terrain. For AM, it's about the ground conductivity and frequency. I once worked at a 1,000-watt AM station that had a signal much larger and clearer signal than the 5,000-watt AM station a few miles away. I'm not a radio engineer, but I'm sure there are plenty on HN who can correct and clarify what I've written. | ||
| ▲ | BuildTheRobots 5 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
Also bear in mind that Droitwitch is radiating 3 different services. Talk Sport (1053 kHz), Radio 4 (198 kHz) and Radio Five Live (693 kHz). My suspicion is that this means an exciter and a stack of amps per service, which then go through a two stage combiner and out to the antenna. There might even be a pair of exciters and amps per service depending on redundancy. The combiners (certainly for FM/DAB/TV services) also cause cumulative attenuation as the signal gets combined each time, so even if all 3 are radiating at the same power, the first in the chain might need twice as much amplification to make up for losses. edit: MB21 (of course) has some fantastic technical info about Droitwitch: https://tx.mb21.co.uk/gallery/gallerypage.php?txid=1454&page... and there's some great pics here, too: https://www.radiorewind.co.uk/radio1/droitwich.htm I believe they're still using a pair of Marconi B6042 transmitters (250kW each, in parallel) to provide at least one of the services. | ||
| ▲ | mschuster91 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
> Is that emitted power, consumed power, or effective radiated power? Going by [1], emitted power. [1] https://www.bbceng.info/Operations/transmitter_ops/Reminisce... | ||