Thread: Effects of TOA
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Old April 15th 07, 11:50 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Jimmie D Jimmie D is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Feb 2007
Posts: 287
Default Effects of TOA

Thanks , sounds about like what I have been experiencing. The time I heard
the guys in California the band was stone quite and when I switched
antennas it was still quite except for the stations in New York Weird
feeling.

Jimmie


"W4WNT" wrote in message
...
I don't know about verticals vs. beams, but certainly you can hear
different areas when using a vertical or using a dipole. I've used both
during numerous contests and found that from NC a dipole hears the
Caribbean while a vertical hears Argentina, Brazil and points south. This
is a G5RV at about 30 feet.

The beams hearing ability may wash out this difference, but the "incoming"
polarity has nothing to do with the "transmitted" polarity. This is why I
have both available.

Good luck,

Bill, W4WNT


"JIMMIE" wrote in message
oups.com...
While operating on 10M I have observed that a halfwave vertical dipole
will communicate to different areas than a 1.25wl vertical monopole an
example would be that during a band opening the 1/2 wl antenna may be
working predominantly into New York while the 1.25 wl antenna is
working best in California or was it vice versa. This has proven
useful for me, instead of fighting a pile-up and can just talk
somewhere else. The two verticals may soon be replaced with a tri-
bander and I was wondering if I could get this same type of effect by
tilting the antenna vertically(no change in polarity) with a remote
controlled device. I think it would be pretty cool to hear different
areas of the country pop in and out as the elevation of the antenna is
changed.

Jimmie