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#1
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Has anyone ever noticed a drop in VOR reception range when flying in smoky
conditions? Last Saturday in southern AZ we had significantly reduced visibility from the big fire north of LA. I saw a lot of flagging on and off of the CDI along with back and forth needle drift until within about 30 miles of the VOR station. We usually get much better reception. -- Best Regards, Mike http://photoshow.comcast.net/mikenoel |
#2
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Smoke will not affect VOR reception.
Mike Noel wrote: Has anyone ever noticed a drop in VOR reception range when flying in smoky conditions? Last Saturday in southern AZ we had significantly reduced visibility from the big fire north of LA. I saw a lot of flagging on and off of the CDI along with back and forth needle drift until within about 30 miles of the VOR station. We usually get much better reception. |
#3
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Suspended particles in the air can absorb VHF energy, will affect UHF
signals, and will absolutely swallow gigahertz and light wave energy (which is why you can't see through haze) - now whether ash particulates from a forest fire will bother VHF is something I'm not ready to take a position on... But, if there are boron molecules in that haze from the firefighting chemicals that raises the probability that it is affecting VHF, and up in frequency... If the erratic VOR signals that day were due to the forest fire, what is also likely is that the rising heat from the fires is causing temperature layering and air turbulence which definitely bends VHF signals, the same as it distorts light waves when looking down a highway on a hot day, or looking through a bonfire... denny |
#4
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Denny wrote:
Suspended particles in the air can absorb VHF energy, will affect UHF signals, and will absolutely swallow gigahertz and light wave energy (which is why you can't see through haze) - now whether ash particulates from a forest fire will bother VHF is something I'm not ready to take a position on... But, if there are boron molecules in that haze from the firefighting chemicals that raises the probability that it is affecting VHF, and up in frequency... If the erratic VOR signals that day were due to the forest fire, what is also likely is that the rising heat from the fires is causing temperature layering and air turbulence which definitely bends VHF signals, the same as it distorts light waves when looking down a highway on a hot day, or looking through a bonfire... The ionized contaminants in the smoke would have to be significant before it would significantly affect VOR reception... not likely. The poster did not state the altitude he was at not the class of VOR in question. VHR radio signals can be affected by certain tropospheric contitions such as temperature inversions. As you stated, it is possible that the heat of the fire could have cause a sort of temperature inversion layer that affected the signal strength resulting in some CDI fluctuation. |
#5
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I was also wondering if the large amounts of carbon particulates in the
Arizona dry air could cause a static charge to build up on the airframe and affect the signal. -- Best Regards, Mike http://photoshow.comcast.net/mikenoel "kontiki" wrote in message ... Smoke will not affect VOR reception. Mike Noel wrote: Has anyone ever noticed a drop in VOR reception range when flying in smoky conditions? Last Saturday in southern AZ we had significantly reduced visibility from the big fire north of LA. I saw a lot of flagging on and off of the CDI along with back and forth needle drift until within about 30 miles of the VOR station. We usually get much better reception. |
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