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Old 9th February 2006 | 10:33
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green granite
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Joined: Nov 2005
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From: land of the clanger
A more indepth article on the subject

Cycles that Affect Propagation
Propagation is affected by cyclical environmental conditions. The shortest of these conditions is the day/night cycle. In general, the transmitting and receiving conditions are by far the best in the nighttime hours. During the daytime, the MUF and LUF both rise -- in order to talk across great distances, less reliable (because of the very long skip) higher frequencies must be used. The season of the year also affects propagation The winter/summer cycles are somewhat like the day/night cycles, except having a lesser influence. In general, the MUF and LUF will both be higher in the summer and lower in the winter. Also, the noise from thunder storms and other natural phenomena is much higher during the summer. In fact, except for local transmissions, communications in the 1700- to 3000 kHz range during the summertime are of limited regular use.

The longest environmental cycle that affects propagation is the sunspot cycle. Before the age of radio, it was noticed that the number of solar storms (sun spots) varies from year to year. Also, the number of sunspots per year was not entirely random. The number of solar storms during a good propagational month exceeds 150 and the number during a weak month is often fewer than 30. The sunspot cycle reaches its peak approximately every 11 years, cycles that have a great impact on radio propagation.

Between these peaks are several years with very low sunspot activity. During years with high sunspot activity, the MUF dramatically increases and long-distance communications across much of the HF band is possible. During the peak of the last sunspot cycle, in 1989, the MUF was often above 30 MHz! When the cycle is at its low point, the MUF decreases and much less of the HF band is usable for long-range communications. Generally, the frequencies above 10,000 kHz dramatically improve during the peak years of the sunspot cycle, and the frequencies below 10,000 kHz are much less affected

@ dawn and dusk there is also a phenomina called GREY LINE propagation which enhances the north / south line range significantly
hope this helps
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