FCC Technician Class Exam Study Guide - 2014-2018/Subelement T3 Group C
Propagation modes: line of sight; sporadic E; meteor and auroral scatter and reflections; tropospheric ducting; F layer skip; radio horizon
The Question Pool
editQuestion 1
edit- Why are direct (not via a repeater) UHF signals rarely heard from stations outside your local coverage area?
- A. They are too weak to go very far
- B. FCC regulations prohibit them from going more than 50 miles
- C. UHF signals are usually not reflected by the ionosphere
- D. They collide with trees and shrubbery and fade out
The correct answer is C.
Question 2
edit- Which of the following might be happening when VHF signals are being received from long distances?
- A. Signals are being reflected from outer space
- B. Signals are arriving by sub-surface ducting
- C. Signals are being reflected by lightning storms in your area
- D. Signals are being refracted from a sporadic E layer
The correct answer is D.
Question 3
edit- What is a characteristic of VHF signals received via auroral reflection?
- A. Signals from distances of 10,000 or more miles are common
- B. The signals exhibit rapid fluctuations of strength and often sound distorted
- C. These types of signals occur only during winter nighttime hours
- D. These types of signals are generally strongest when your antenna is aimed west
The correct answer is B.
Question 4
edit- Which of the following propagation types is most commonly associated with occasional strong over-the-horizon signals on the 10, 6, and 2 meter bands?
- A. Backscatter
- B. Sporadic E
- C. D layer absorption
- D. Gray-line propagation
The correct answer is B.
Question 5
edit- Which of the following effects might cause radio signals to be heard despite obstructions between the transmitting and receiving stations?
- A. Knife-edge diffraction
- B. Faraday rotation
- C. Quantum tunneling
- D. Doppler shift
The correct answer is A.
Question 6
edit- What mode is responsible for allowing over-the-horizon VHF and UHF communications to ranges of approximately 300 miles on a regular basis?
- A. Tropospheric scatter
- B. D layer refraction
- C. F2 layer refraction
- D. Faraday rotation
The correct answer is A.
Question 7
edit- What band is best suited for communicating via meteor scatter?
- A. 10 meters
- B. 6 meters
- C. 2 meters
- D. 70 cm
The correct answer is B.
Question 8
edit- What causes tropospheric ducting?
- A. Discharges of lightning during electrical storms
- B. Sunspots and solar flares
- C. Updrafts from hurricanes and tornadoes
- D. Temperature inversions in the atmosphere
The correct answer is D.
Question 9
edit- What is generally the best time for long-distance 10 meter band propagation via the F layer?
- A. From dawn to shortly after sunset during periods of high sunspot activity
- B. From shortly after sunset to dawn during periods of high sunspot activity
- C. From dawn to shortly after sunset during periods of low sunspot activity
- D. From shortly after sunset to dawn during periods of low sunspot activity
The correct answer is A.
Question 10
edit- What is the radio horizon?
- A. The distance over which two stations can communicate by direct path
- B. The distance from the ground to a horizontally mounted antenna
- C. The farthest point you can see when standing at the base of your antenna tower
- D. The shortest distance between two points on the Earth's surface
The correct answer is A.
Question 11
edit- Why do VHF and UHF radio signals usually travel somewhat farther than the visual line of sight distance between two stations?
- A. Radio signals move somewhat faster than the speed of light
- B. Radio waves are not blocked by dust particles
- C. The Earth seems less curved to radio waves than to light
- D. Radio waves are blocked by dust particles
The correct answer is C.
Question 12
edit- Which of the following bands may provide long distance communications during the peak of the sunspot cycle?
- A. Six or ten meters
- B. 23 centimeters
- C. 70 centimeters or 1.25 meters
- D. All of these choices are correct
The correct answer is A.