Abstract
Measurements of signal attenuation were made from a suburban hilltop base station to a mobile vehicle on several streets in the surrounding countryside. Measurements of signal strength were simultaneously made in the winter of 1971 at frequencies of 836 MHz and 11.2 GHz and then repeated in the summer to determine the effects of foliage. The presence of foliage reduced the received signal strength and the effect was more pronounced at X-band than at UHF. In cases where the shadowing obstacle was tree covered, signal levels at UHF might typically be 10 dB lower when the trees were in full leaf, whereas at X-band this additional loss could be as high as 20 dB. The experimental data was compared to values predicted by knife-edge diffraction and reasonable agreement was found.

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