this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2024
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Mediumwave (AM) broadcast radio uses lower frequencies than other modern broadcasting and so requires much larger antennas (generally getting larger and larger as the frequency gets lower on the dial). This often entails highly customized antenna designs engineered for the particular site and station frequencies. For most radio stations (FM, TV, etc), the towers are there simply to get the relatively small antennas up high, but for AM stations like KNBR, the towers generally ARE the antennas.
@[email protected] oh that's a funky antenna! Most AM antennas aren't that intricate.
Apparently that's a "pseudo Franklin" design (I'd call it more like a collinear) with a capacity hat.
KFBK Sacramento has the only true Franklin antenna design on an AM station in the USA and it's reeeeeally funky looking. It does with two towers what some more conventional AM directionals take four to EIGHT to accomplish. It's kinda boss.
@[email protected] Yeah, KFBK is on 1530, making it at least possible to build a full Franklin antenna (2 half wave verticals stacked atop each other - a full wavelength!)
@[email protected] I wonder if the original Ampliphase development/test transmitter is still there. It's my understanding that their daily driver is a Nautel
@[email protected] Wait, which station? KNBR is (according to their license) a Gates.
@[email protected] oh I was talking about KFBK. At least as of 2009, a Nautel (not sure what model but the front panel reminds me of the V series?), a Harris DX50, and the RCA Ampliphase TX appeared to live there.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=97F9TO0yBNU
@[email protected] Neat!