I say ignore the TOA. (For those unfamiliar with the term, it's the
"takeoff angle", which usually means the elevation angle at which the
antenna pattern is strongest.)
What counts is the gain at the elevation angle at which you want to
communicate. This, in turn, depends on the distance and the propagation
conditions. If you need a strong signal at an elevation angle of 15
degrees, it doesn't matter whether the TOA is 10 degrees, 15, or 20 or
zero. All that counts is the gain at 15 degrees. And an antenna with TOA
of 15 degrees doesn't necessarily have the most gain at 15 degrees of
any antenna.
Consider the following three 40 meter antennas: A vertical antenna with
about 8 radials (18 ohm ground system resistance), a dipole at 30 feet,
and a dipole at 40 feet, all over average ground.
Antenna TOA deg Gain at 26 deg. Gain at 15 deg.
Vert 26 -1.76 dBi -2.72 dBi
Dipole @ 30' 90 (straight up) 2.58 dBi -1.28 dBi
Dipole @ 40' 51 3.9 dBi 0.32 dBi
-- Which one has the lowest takeoff angle?
-- Which one is the best for communicating at 26 deg. elevation angle?
-- Which one is the best for communciating at 15 deg. elevation angle?
What does the takeoff angle have to do with which antenna is best?
Roy Lewallen, W7EL
art wrote:
Most people have added an amplifier only to find out that the
difference in signal
was very small. Thus many people deride the value of a 'silly' db gain
whereas DX'ers say that a single db extra is a lot !
Fact is that most long distance signals on 20 metres come in at angles
of 11 degrees or less where as the 'normal' antenna has a TOA of around
14 degrees.
So where a dxer points to the extra 1db gain as being everything in
fact it is the lowering of the TOA that comes with the extra gain. In
my opinion if one designs his antenna for a lower TOA say 10 to 11
degrees then even tho its gain may well be below the dxers choise( a
very long boom or stacked antennas) the lower TOA with less gain will
show little difference
to the antenna of choics because the lower edge of the radiation lobe
will follow the same line and any extra gain provided will have the
same effect of adding an amplifier which is minimal compared to the
ability of capturing signals that arrive at low angles.
I believe it is time for antenna designers to concentrate less on
obtaining gain and instead concentrate more on lowering the TOA.
without the need of excessive real estate requirements.
What say ?
Art
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