Hello,
I'm sure I knew the answer to this question at one time, but my aging brain is failing me at the moment. I'm wanting to know why AM Broadcast (Medium Wave) stations typically propagate over much shorter distances at night than Shortwave broadcasts. In my experience AM radio stations can often be heard at night at distances of 700 to maybe 1200 miles or a bit more. I don't recall ever hearing a Mexican AM broadcast station here in northern Oregon at night, or a station from the US East Coast, but I have heard KGO in San Francisco many times, as well as radio stations in Utah, Nevada, Colorado, etc. Yet with Shortwave broadcast I've often heard New Zealand, China, the BBC, and others from far flung corners of the globe. I know Medium Wave frequencies typically refract off the F layer, the same layer as HF frequencies, so one would think the propagation distances would be similar. I also know that with the right conditions a 100 watt Ham rig can make contacts on the opposite side of the globe, so I don't think a difference in ERP is the reason. Maybe MW frequencies don't reflect off the earth as well as HF, making multiple hops unlikely? I'm really not sure, and the answer has eluded my Google-fu. Can someone here answer this question please? I'm sure someone knows.
Thanks for the help!
.
I'm sure I knew the answer to this question at one time, but my aging brain is failing me at the moment. I'm wanting to know why AM Broadcast (Medium Wave) stations typically propagate over much shorter distances at night than Shortwave broadcasts. In my experience AM radio stations can often be heard at night at distances of 700 to maybe 1200 miles or a bit more. I don't recall ever hearing a Mexican AM broadcast station here in northern Oregon at night, or a station from the US East Coast, but I have heard KGO in San Francisco many times, as well as radio stations in Utah, Nevada, Colorado, etc. Yet with Shortwave broadcast I've often heard New Zealand, China, the BBC, and others from far flung corners of the globe. I know Medium Wave frequencies typically refract off the F layer, the same layer as HF frequencies, so one would think the propagation distances would be similar. I also know that with the right conditions a 100 watt Ham rig can make contacts on the opposite side of the globe, so I don't think a difference in ERP is the reason. Maybe MW frequencies don't reflect off the earth as well as HF, making multiple hops unlikely? I'm really not sure, and the answer has eluded my Google-fu. Can someone here answer this question please? I'm sure someone knows.
Thanks for the help!
.