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Shortwave transmitting 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]
Sterba curtain arrays are described in
William Orr's
Radio Handbook.
There are multiple feed arrangements for the Sterba curtain arrays, as with HRS type antennas. However, Sterba arrays provide a limited gain-bandwidth system for the demands of modern shortwave broadcasting systems therefore they are significantly less common than more modern options, such as an
ALLISS
system.
Sterba curtain arrays preceded HRS type antennas by less than a decade. Only about 1% of high power HF broadcasting antennas in use in the 2000s are Sterba type curtain arrays. It is expected that by 2020 that all Sterba type curtain arrays will have been decommissioned.
[
citation needed
]
There are noted instances of Sterba arrays still in use by Amateur Radio operators operating on HF bands and transmitting in narrow bandwidths.
[2]
References
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