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  2. Shortwave broadband antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shortwave_broadband_antenna

    Even automatic antenna tuners will not work with frequency hopping signals. A less ambitious idea of “broadband antenna” (often called “wideband”) is an antenna that continuously covers the proportionally widest amateur band, that spans 3.5–4.0 MHz (a 14% bandwidth), [b] without requiring an antenna tuner. There are many such designs ...

  3. Curtain array - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtain_array

    Curtain arrays were originally developed during the 1920s and 1930s when there was a lot of experimentation with long distance shortwave broadcasting. The underlying concept was to achieve improvements in gain and/or directionality over the simple dipole antenna, possibly by folding one or more dipoles into a smaller physical space, or to arrange multiple dipoles such that their radiation ...

  4. T2FD antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T2FD_antenna

    A 20-meter-long T²FD antenna, covering the 5-30 MHz band. The Tilted Terminated Folded Dipole (T²FD, T2FD, or TTFD) or Balanced Termination, Folded Dipole (BTFD) - also known as W3HH antenna - is a general-purpose shortwave antenna developed in the late 1940s by the United States Navy.

  5. Antenna types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_types

    Assuming the building is about 20 feet tall, the length of wire seems to be on the order of 100 feet long – too short to be an HF Beverage antenna. Random wire antenna Moxon (1993) describes the random-wire antenna as an "odd bit of wire". [14] [page needed] It is the typical informal antenna erected for receiving shortwave and AM radio.

  6. Sterba antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterba_antenna

    Before the HRS antenna became the default design for high power broadcasting in the 1950s, Sterba curtains were used to transmit shortwave broadcasts. Sterba curtains are modest-gain single-band curtain array antennas. They are named after Ernest J. Sterba, who developed a simple shortwave curtain array for Bell Labs in the 1930s. [1]

  7. Shortwave relay station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shortwave_relay_station

    The ALLISS module is a fully rotatable antenna system for high power (typically 500 kW only) shortwave radio broadcasting—it essentially is a self contained shortwave relay station. Most of the world's shortwave relay stations do not use this technology, due to its cost (15m EUR per ALLISS module: Transmitter + Antenna + Automation equipment).