| Before
selecting a frequency for your AM station, be aware of potential
interference at night on certain channels.
Did you ever wonder why some
radio stations can be heard for much greater distances at night?
This curious effect, which
often manifests as nighttime interference, is caused by a
phenomenon known as "skywave." Skywave is essentially
radio waves from full power AM stations that travel upward,
refracted through the ionosphere (from early evening throughout
the night into morning) such that radio signals sometimes return
to earth far from where they originate. It's especially prevalent
on frequencies* that host 50,000-watt radio stations, which pump
up to 200 times the energy skyward, compared with local and
regional stations.
Why just at night? During the daytime, the sun's radiation causes
atmospheric conditions to change such that the waves pass through
the ionosphere and into space. At night when that layer is cool,
it reflects them back. With hundreds of radio stations on a given
frequency, all bouncing their skywaves simultaneously, what is
heard is a garble of background interference.
Some of the dynamics that determine the level of interference are
radio signal frequency, ionosphere density and the angle at which
the signal enters the ionosphere. Because of the earth's rotation
in relation to the sun, its atmosphere constantly changes. Solar
storms and sunspots from these changes can also contribute to
skywave interference.
How can skywave affect
your low-power AM radio transmission?
The major effect is that
during the hours from sunset to sunrise, the softer fringe areas
of your low-power AM signal can mix with the interference to
varying degrees. The effect on the signal can range from complete
obliteration to the sense that there is a distracting sound in the
background. Closer in, where your signal is stronger, skywave
interference has proportionally less effect.
Skywave is heard on the East Coast into the morning daylight
hours, because out West, where it is still dark, the bounce
continues. Out West, it's the opposite effect, with some skywave
taking hold well before sunset, due to eastern stations that are
already in the dark.
And skywave is not just produced by commercial radio stations. It
is also produced by low-power AM radio stations such as one you
may operate. Stories abound of low-power operators who have
received monitoring reports in the mail from as far away as
Canada, Mexico and (yes) Italy.
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| *
The best frequencies for low skywave are 530, 1610, 1620,
1630-1700. The worst frequencies for skywave interference are
640-890, 1000-1240, 1340, 1400, 1440, 1450, 1490-1580. |