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- Q876584 subject Q6418236.
- Q876584 subject Q8864550.
- Q876584 subject Q8976752.
- Q876584 abstract "The AM transmitter in Burg, near Magdeburg, Germany, is a huge facility for longwave and mediumwave broadcasting. Its most dominant constructions are a 324 metre guyed radio mast and two 210 metre guyed steel tube masts.The 324 metre high mast is a grounded construction with triangular cross section. Until the early 1990s it had a highly effective fading-reducing transmitting antenna in the form of a special cage aerial developed in Russia, known as the ARRT-antenna. It was used for the 1000 kW-medium wave transmitter operated on 783 kHz, which was the strongest transmitter of the former GDR, as transmitting antenna. Today this mast has a cage aerial for long wave. Both the 210 metre high tube masts are isolated from the ground. One of the two tube masts can be used as a toe-fed mast antenna for long and medium wave, while the other mast can be used only as a transmitting antenna for the medium-wave band.As further antenna systems there are still three step-radiating antennas, each of which is supported by two free standing steel framework towers and which served as transmitting antenna for a medium-wave transmitter on the frequency 1575 kHz (shut down at present) and a triangle plane aerial for medium wave.From 1967 to 1976 there was also another 350 metre high radio mast for long wave, the steel tube lattice mast SL3, which was used for transmitting the program of Radio Wolga. In order not to affect the radiation field of the other masts, this radio mast was placed at a distance of 2.2 kilometres from the other masts near the road from Burg to Grabow, in the neighbourhood of Gütter, part of Burg. It collapsed on February 18, 1976, because of a defective bolt and was not rebuilt. As a replacement, one of the two 210 metre high steel tube masts was converted in such a way that it could also broadcast the program of Radio Wolga (and later also of Radioropa Info) in the long-wave range. There are still some remains of the basements of the radio mast SL3 today.In the 1960s some propaganda transmitters, as German military transmitters, were operated on the site of the AM transmitter Burg.".
- Q876584 thumbnail Burg_transmitter_210_Meter_Mast.JPG?width=300.
- Q876584 wikiPageExternalLink maps?ie=UTF8&z=18&ll=52.269247,11.923342&spn=0.001458,0.003659&t=h&om=1.
- Q876584 wikiPageExternalLink maps?t=k&ll=52.285796,11.898129&spn=0.002973,0.007317&om=1.
- Q876584 wikiPageExternalLink ?buildingID=45449.
- Q876584 wikiPageExternalLink ?b45447.
- Q876584 wikiPageExternalLink ?b45448.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q1082861.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q11833101.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q1361560.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q15078788.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q1733.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q183.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q2146626.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q264091.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q466814.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q525632.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q536826.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q6418236.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q8864550.
- Q876584 wikiPageWikiLink Q8976752.
- Q876584 point "52.269247 11.923342".
- Q876584 type SpatialThing.
- Q876584 comment "The AM transmitter in Burg, near Magdeburg, Germany, is a huge facility for longwave and mediumwave broadcasting. Its most dominant constructions are a 324 metre guyed radio mast and two 210 metre guyed steel tube masts.The 324 metre high mast is a grounded construction with triangular cross section. Until the early 1990s it had a highly effective fading-reducing transmitting antenna in the form of a special cage aerial developed in Russia, known as the ARRT-antenna.".
- Q876584 label "Burg AM transmitter".
- Q876584 lat "52.269247".
- Q876584 long "11.923342".
- Q876584 depiction Burg_transmitter_210_Meter_Mast.JPG.