The new push-button stack match controllers can receive on one antenna and
transmit on all (or any combination of antennas). This has been invaluable
during S-9 precipitation static. It is only about S-2 on the bottom antenna of
the 10 meter stack. (7/7/7 top at 140', bottom at 40')
Chuck W5PR
Sent from my iPhone
> On Apr 22, 2015, at 10:42 AM, David Robbins <k1ttt@verizon.net> wrote:
>
> when its really bad we listen on the lower antennas of the stacks...
> unfortunately that can mean manual switching if the high antennas are really
> stronger to the
> area we are working.
>
>
> Apr 22, 2015 11:05:08 AM, john@kk9a.com wrote:
>
> Rain static can be a real pain during a contest. Using only lower
> antennas helps but in my station the static on these can still be pretty
> strong. Perhaps my lowest antennas are not low enough. What do the big
> contest stations use during rain static conditions? Is a SteppIR really
> quieter?
>
> John KK9A
>
>
> To: towertalk@contesting.com
> Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Precipitation static
> From: David Robbins
> Reply-to: k1ttt@arrl.net
> Date: Wed, 22 Apr 2015 06:54:10 -0500 (CDT)
>
> precipitation static really doesn't require any precipitation or
> lightning, it
> is due to corona created by the high electric field under a convective cloud.
> If the field gets high enough then lightning is likely to accompany it...
> when
> lightning strikes from such a storm it momentarily lowers the electric field
> gradient which reduces or stops the static until the field builds again.
> because the gradient is between the ground and cloud the higher the
> antenna the
> worse the corona. and having other antennas above reduces the gradient on
> the
> lower ones so lower antennas in a stack are often quiet when the top one is
> noisy.
>
> all grounded construction doesn't help because the charge causing the
> corona is
> not building up on the antenna because of triboelectric charging like you can
> get with windblown snow or sand. in those cases the charge is put on the
> antenna by contact with the snow or sand and can be drained by a resistor or
> inductor. in the case of corona from the electric field it is actually the
> cloud attracting the charge up the structure from the ground causing a
> concentration near the tips of the elements. Since the charge is drawn up
> from
> the ground any other connection to ground through a resistor or inductor
> won't
> drain it off.
>
> Most likely the steppir is quiet because it is essentially wrapped in
> fiberglass which may help prevent corona by shielding the conductive parts of
> the elements or just reducing the field gradient near the tips of the
> elements... note that Telrex used to try to do that by adding balls to the
> tips of their elements on some models... that didn't seem to help on the
> ones I
> had, I suspect because they still had lots of sharp points due to the screws
> through the elements and corners on T-match shorting plates.
>
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