Since both antennas cover UHF, point in opposite directions, and are spaced
within a fraction of a wavelength at UHF frequencies and below, it is
extremely likely that the phase cancellations of the two antennas causes the
drop in signal strength when mixed in a combiner. The solutions are far as I
can tell would be to bring both feed lines (coax lines) down to the receiver
and switch when you need one or the other, or to filter out UHF content from
the log periodic with a step low pass filter, or separate the 2 antennas
more, since you appear to be creating a phased array even though you never
intended to by the way you are configuring them. Phased arrays deliberately
add and subtract RF energy to gain directivity at the expense of attenuation
in other directions.
Smarty
"szilagyic" wrote in message
oups.com...
Hello,
I have two antennas that I am trying to combine, and have a question
in regards to the best way to do this. The first antenna is a
Winegard HD7084P (FM/VHF/UHF lpda) that is hooked to a preamp and
tuned in perfectly. I want to add my other antenna (Winegard PR-8800
UHF bowtie) that is also tuned in and points in the opposite direction
(almost 180 degrees) to pick up some UHF stations. The two antennas
are side by side, but the ends of the elements are about 4 feet
apart. When I disconnect the HD7084P from the preamp and connect the
combiner and hook the HD7084P to the combiner, the signal strength for
HD stations maintains about the same. But when I hook up the second
antenna to the combiner, the HD signal strength from the HD7084P drops
by 10-40% (depending on the channel). I tried two combiners/splitters
and got the same results, one is a RCA brand splitter, the other is a
Radio Shack hybrid splitter/combiner. Would something like the
Channel Master 0538 or the Winegard CC-7870 work better for this?? I
read up and these models mention "high isolation" which I can't seem
to find any information on. It seems like a powered combiner would be
ideal so that there is no loss at all, but I haven't seen anything
like that. I am looking for any suggestions or ideas that anybody
might have.
I really appreciate all of the help and feedback.
Thank you very much,
--
Chris