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"October Fury," Peter Huchthausen, 2002
The communications officer, too, tried to hide his eagerness to receive news, an order, anything. It was standard procedure for the fleet broadcast to come up on the low frequency schedules to provide brief periods of communications support for submarines in midocean. Maybe ten minutes at the most. The massive low-frequency antenna farm south-east of Moscow was sending nothing to them—at least nothing more than the carrier tone—to tell them that their equipment was functioning. The low-frequency broadcast had always intrigued Shumkov, although he was a well-educated radio technician. The thought that the low-frequency waves actually propagated through the surface of the Earth and into the depths of the oceans, reaching out tens of thousands of kilometers around the globe, fascinated him. The thought that his equipment was tuned and provided the key card to read an encoded message at these great distances was still a magical, almost religious aspect to him personally.
Originally posted by watch_the_rocks
I was under the impression that VLF could travel through the Earth's crust? Apparently, during the Cold War, there was this huge radio transceiver south of Moscow, set up specifically to communicate with Russian Navy submarines. That radio waves would travel through the water/earth so that the submarines would know when to come to the surface, or something like that.
I'll go find the book. Hang on.
edit:
"October Fury," Peter Huchthausen, 2002
The communications officer, too, tried to hide his eagerness to receive news, an order, anything. It was standard procedure for the fleet broadcast to come up on the low frequency schedules to provide brief periods of communications support for submarines in midocean. Maybe ten minutes at the most. The massive low-frequency antenna farm south-east of Moscow was sending nothing to them—at least nothing more than the carrier tone—to tell them that their equipment was functioning. The low-frequency broadcast had always intrigued Shumkov, although he was a well-educated radio technician. The thought that the low-frequency waves actually propagated through the surface of the Earth and into the depths of the oceans, reaching out tens of thousands of kilometers around the globe, fascinated him. The thought that his equipment was tuned and provided the key card to read an encoded message at these great distances was still a magical, almost religious aspect to him personally.
Also, behindthescenes, would it be possible for you to shorten that quote? Write it like this: [url=(website address, remove rounded brackets)]Radio Comm Website[/url]. If you do that, all that will show will be the 'Radio Comm Website' line, and all you have to do is click on it and it will take you to the address you put in.
[edit on 20/9/2006 by watch_the_rocks]
A German antenna was erected during the Second World War called Goliath. It was quite efficient but was limited both in power and efficiency by the wartime lack of copper and other suitable materials. It was used for submarine communications. After the war, the then Soviet Union seized the Goliath antenna, packed up its massive cables and towers, and assembled it inside the Soviet Union near Gorky. (I’m not sure where we learned about the design of the Goliath. I wonder if it was from captured German plans?)
NAA is located on a peninsula at Cutler, Maine. A diagram of this station shows two giant sub-antennas, each as large as several football fields and requiring twenty six 800-to-900 foot towers fed by two large transmitters. The antenna is split into a North and a South array. Each array is fed from a separate helix building and a transmitter building housing two transmitters is also located midway between the arrays. The transmitters can each supply one megawatt. Each antenna array resembles a six-sided compass rosette. The antenna feed point is located at the center of the rosette where the special building called the helix house is located.
Looking over a schematic of the helix house equipment you see what looks like a simple matching network consisting of a few coils called variometers and something called a reactor. A variometer consists of two coils, a stator and a rotor. The rotor is located inside of the stator and is connected in series with the stator. When the rotor is rotated the mutual coupling either aids or reduces the effective inductance of the variometer. Since the antennas are operated below their natural resonance their impedance is capacitive and must be tuned by a series variometer. However, when looking at the equipment inside the helix house you see nothing familiar. In reality, this is a link-coupled antenna matching circuit, but that is where the similarity to familiar low powered equipment stops. The helix house is jammed full of giant coils and openly wound transformers, most larger than a large truck. The inductor wires are about 4 inches in diameter consisting of multiple strands of Litz wire. The antenna itself is tuned with a series variometer while a shunt variometer couples the signal into the antenna tuner from a coaxial feed line leading from the transmitter through a long underground tunnel.
Exmouth.wa.gov.au
In 1962 agreement was reached between the Australian and United States Governments to establish a VLF Communications Station at North West Cape. The town of Exmouth was created to support this facility. Both were officially opened in 1967.
Named in honour of former Australian Prime Minister Harold E. Holt, the Untied States Navy Very Low Frequency Transmitter Station has thirteen towers, all more than 300 metres high, to support the antenna canopy.
Originally posted by watch_the_rocks
Come to think of it, isn't there a VLF relay station in Australia somewhere, in WA, possibly, that was set up by the U.S.N. to communicate with their submarines in the south Indian Ocean?
Also, I think I just found a description of the Soviet antenna, or at least what it was designed from:
A German antenna was erected during the Second World War called Goliath. It was quite efficient but was limited both in power and efficiency by the wartime lack of copper and other suitable materials. It was used for submarine communications. After the war, the then Soviet Union seized the Goliath antenna, packed up its massive cables and towers, and assembled it inside the Soviet Union near Gorky. (I’m not sure where we learned about the design of the Goliath. I wonder if it was from captured German plans?)
NAA is located on a peninsula at Cutler, Maine. A diagram of this station shows two giant sub-antennas, each as large as several football fields and requiring twenty six 800-to-900 foot towers fed by two large transmitters. The antenna is split into a North and a South array. Each array is fed from a separate helix building and a transmitter building housing two transmitters is also located midway between the arrays. The transmitters can each supply one megawatt. Each antenna array resembles a six-sided compass rosette. The antenna feed point is located at the center of the rosette where the special building called the helix house is located.
Looking over a schematic of the helix house equipment you see what looks like a simple matching network consisting of a few coils called variometers and something called a reactor. A variometer consists of two coils, a stator and a rotor. The rotor is located inside of the stator and is connected in series with the stator. When the rotor is rotated the mutual coupling either aids or reduces the effective inductance of the variometer. Since the antennas are operated below their natural resonance their impedance is capacitive and must be tuned by a series variometer. However, when looking at the equipment inside the helix house you see nothing familiar. In reality, this is a link-coupled antenna matching circuit, but that is where the similarity to familiar low powered equipment stops. The helix house is jammed full of giant coils and openly wound transformers, most larger than a large truck. The inductor wires are about 4 inches in diameter consisting of multiple strands of Litz wire. The antenna itself is tuned with a series variometer while a shunt variometer couples the signal into the antenna tuner from a coaxial feed line leading from the transmitter through a long underground tunnel.
That page is very interesting.
Additionally, this here appears to be a VLF farm with 7 towers, correct me if I'm wrong. I probably am.
Also, this image, , appears to be plans for some sort of 'valley span antenna,' over Sydney Harbour!
And here we go:
Exmouth.wa.gov.au
In 1962 agreement was reached between the Australian and United States Governments to establish a VLF Communications Station at North West Cape. The town of Exmouth was created to support this facility. Both were officially opened in 1967.
This VLF station is not listed on the table Wikipedia has of VLF stations around the world. Does anyone know if it is deactivated?