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Old March 23rd 04, 04:18 PM
Steve Nosko
 
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"Richard Harrison" wrote in message
...
Steve Nosko wrote:
"To change the phase, yes...To change the pattern. Probably not."

Certainly changing just the phase of the signal between two identical
driven elements makes an enormous difference in radiation pattern.


Obviously I was not complete in my response. I was focusing on the
"simple" part. Where I was going here was that simply paralleling the two
feeds with different coax lengths to set the phase difference won't do it.
(perhaps too much assumption on my part regarding the OPs desired patterns
and definitino of simple) The job of combiming the two feeds is non-trivial.
If you drive two antennas with a given power ratio (say, equal) but
different phase, the patterns are easy to calculate. However, you can't
just parallel the two lines. For equal powers in the antennas, I believe
the patterns are well known. What about the coupling effect between
antennas?

Richard, Are the patterns in the handbook all equal power division? I
don't think I have a recent handbook...

In a case of a broadcast antenna pattern some years ago, it turned out that
to get one of the desired patterns, one of the antennas had to actually
absorb power. There was a negative resistance term that fell out of one of
the equations and the original engineer had problems desiging the network.
An associate of mine dug into it and figured it out.
'guards,
--
Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's.