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Topband: Long wave Beverage antennas

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Subject: Topband: Long wave Beverage antennas
From: "k1fz" <k1fz@myfairpoint.net>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2014 16:16:47 -0400
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A excerpt from the March 1925  trans-Atlantic broadcast is available again on 
my www.qsl.net/k1fz/beveragenotes.html  page. It is large, taking time to 
download.
Parts of the broadcast not included  had CW QRM (someone sending V's), and 
severe QSB. 
This broadcast was received on a  52,610 foot wave (Beverage) antenna 
consisting of two #10 wires starting at Belfast and going to South Searsmont, 
on the far side of Black Brook, near Moody mountain.  
The spaced wires ran South-West, but transformers were configured to receive 
from the North-East,
By 1926 they had three runs spaced six miles.  Total ground length 29.890 miles 
of two spaced wires.  Total #10 wire in the air is just under 60 miles.
Radio Corporation of America abandoned the site and antenna  just after the 
1929 stock market crash.  By early 1930s, to well after World War II,  rural 
electrification took place and much of the wire went into farms across the 
country side.

I saw a WEB site saying the Houlton Wave antenna of 4 phased, 3 miles long, 
spaced 2 miles is probably the largest wave antenna. I don't think so !

73
Bruce-K1FZ

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