But then again, what do I know, apparently I need a lesson on inverse distance field.
It would seem that you do since you obviously really do not understand the affects of fading and bandwidth.
In our situation presented here: We see a very small change in wavelength, no change on the receiving or transmitting antenna locations but a huge change in transmitted power in a high noise environment, with difficult propagation characteristics. I am sure with all of your field experience you can tell me what the noise floor in that area is as I am sure you have it measured for your propagation studies to design coverage. That is always a first step in any study. But you want to go with multi-path fading as being the issue that needs resolution here. Interesting. That is not normally the first place to look.
But as I said, all Skip has to do is move the antenna a few feet. If it is a fading issue the signal will jump back up, if it does not then we know it is not.
RF design basics are first to ensure that there is a chance that a signal may be received. With a huge decrease in transmitted power, possible de-sense issues associated with being in a high noise area, not to mention the usual crappy receivers in COTS FM Broadcast equipment, the money will be on low signal strength at the antenna. But if you want to sell a line of bravo sierra on multi-path fading, go right ahead. I sure that you have an adequate supply of fan boys to cheer you on.
But I do note that you are now asking Skip to do EXACTLY what I asked him to do in my first post. hmmmmm.
wsuffa said:
Life's too short to argue about this kind of stuff.
I guess you found out you got an extension, congrats!!
BTW in a study that I did a long time ago, for frequencies that are higher than what we are talking about, the urban canyons and multi-path actually helped improve the chances of receiving a signal. But even though the coherence of the signal might cause some issues, the type of modulation being used in my study and RX line up, could tolerate the fades due to separate receivers working out of phase and then using a time base to reconstruct the signal. This is similar to using a diversity antenna scheme.
I am looking at several FM broadcast band all in one chips. These retail for under $4 and a couple I have seen are capable of using a single antenna diversity (NOT true diversity) scheme to minimize fading in a mobile environment. The cost to implement that is but a few cents so it would not surprise me to see that employed in many COTS radios. Without seeing the specifics from Bose we will not know for sure.
in closing....lighten up Francis!