When Your Signal Doesn’t Reach as Far as Expected
Limited coverage occurs when a station does not communicate reliably over the distance an operator expects, even when equipment appears to be functioning normally.
This situation is common on VHF and UHF, but it can also affect HF operation. In most cases, coverage limits are caused by geometry and placement, not transmitter power.
What This Usually Looks Like
You may have limited coverage if:
- Local contacts are weaker than expected
- Simplex range is short or inconsistent
- Repeater access is unreliable despite adequate power
- Increasing power produces little or no improvement
- Performance varies significantly by direction
These symptoms point to coverage geometry issues, not equipment failure.
What This Situation Usually Means
Limited coverage is often caused by:
- Insufficient antenna height
- Obstructions blocking line-of-sight paths
- Poor antenna placement relative to terrain
- Feedline loss reducing effective signal strength
This condition is especially common in VHF/UHF operation, where line-of-sight dominates performance.
What Usually Does Not Help
When coverage is limited, the following rarely improve results:
- Increasing transmitter power alone
- Replacing radios without changing placement
- Adding accessories that do not affect geometry
- Comparing results to stations in very different environments
Power cannot compensate for blocked or poor line-of-sight paths.
What to Focus on First
Productive priorities include:
- Evaluating antenna height and placement
- Understanding surrounding terrain and obstructions
- Preserving signal quality through efficient feedline choices
- Aligning antenna patterns with coverage goals
Small improvements in height or placement often outperform large power increases.
Where to Learn More Next
To explore this situation further, review:
- The Rural VHF/UHF Operation case study
- Designing a Rural VHF/UHF Station
- Operating environment guidance related to line-of-sight and terrain
These pages explain why coverage behaves as it does and how to design stations that maximize reach.
Core Guidance
If your coverage is limited, your priority is to improve geometry and placement, not to increase transmitter power.
Understanding this leads to more predictable and reliable communication.
Why This Guide Exists
This guide exists to help operators recognize coverage-limited behavior early and focus their effort on height, placement, and terrain awareness rather than unnecessary escalation.
