My turn for a radio sea story.
I was on Barter Island...north slope of Alaska near the Canada
border (Kaktovik), when we had a three day RF 'event'. Whereas
we generally could communicate with over-the-pole aircraft at
ranges of 200 miles, we suddnely couldn't talk to them until they
were just about overhead. Our radar also suddenly started painting
the fuel tanks of the next DEW site west...but we couldn't see aircraft
50 miles away. Talk about refraction!
Just for the record, I'm an RF guy too...I worked for a few years doing
path studies, with all the measuring gear to confirm theory. The end results?
On average, the math worked...but there were days it didn't. The more
marginal the predictions (in terms of range), the more it varied from day-to-day.
The folks paricipating in this thread suggesting that the physical/optical model
of the earth is not the same as the RF model are right on. 4/3K ring a bell?
Cranky tonight Norm B
On Wed, 12 Jan 2005 22:51:00 GMT,
(Bob) wrote:
On Wed, 12 Jan 2005 01:43:12 -0500, "Jack Painter"
wrote:
Tropospheric Ducting is a real problem with VHF-Marine.
yes, as a ham i once talked from allentown, PA to n. carolina on VHF
FM in the ham bands.
While Bruce has some
interesting stories to tell about making use of that up North, we normally
find it a real hindrance to good communications in the mid-Atlantic. Having
five or more CG Groups trying to answer the same mayday,
yes, we CG radio operators try to avoid that situation but it's
sometimes inevitable. what's even worse is that we sometimes don't
respond to a mayday, assuming it's in some other CG AOR.
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