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Old April 20th 08, 01:34 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Ed_G Ed_G is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Dec 2007
Posts: 69
Default Ground conductivity's effect on vertical

Richard Clark wrote in
:

On 19 Apr 2008 21:35:28 GMT, "Ed_G"
wrote:

In my case, I am considering the use of a vertical at a new
residence
built on sand. Since I am not concerned about low angle radiation
characteristics, the Half Wave may be something to consider.....
giving me a fairly efficient vertical operation with some NVIS
characteristics.


Hi Ed,

Efficient? A vertical has almost no Near Vertical radiation for Near
Vertical Incidence Skywave. You can get along with "almost no," or
you can simply use a low horizontal which would exhibit "a lot of"
Near Vertical Incidence Skywave.

Good ground, bad ground, radials, no radials won't change efficiency
much for the vertical's incidence overhead (there's a hole in that
pattern).

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC


Richard,

By "efficient" I was referring to the transfer of power.... to a
presumed 50 ohm antenna input, not to any radiation characteristics !
As I understood it, a half wave vertical can give me this, with a
little effort. I also understood it to have a fairly high take off
angle.... which will certainly give me better in-state coverage than a
good low angle takeoff would..... wouldn't it?

Yes, I know a proper NVIS antenna would be far better than this....
that is why I used the term "some NVIS" characteristics.

TNX


Ed