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I looked it up in my course materials. It has a balanced feed of 50
ohms. A very broad front lobe with a high front to back ratio. I believe you could consider it on par with a compact (short elements) 2 element Yagi. Structurally, I think the "tails" are a bit of a problem compared to other forms of shortening. It is difficult to compare Quads to anything else. Quads always look good on paper because they are essentially a pair of antennas that are efficiently coupled. They are challenging to build, install & maintain due to the three dimensional construction. I have not built one (yet?)... de W8CCW John On Fri, 18 Aug 2006 01:01:02 GMT, John Ferrell wrote: The ARRL Antenna modeling course includes the Moxon. I kind of visualize the elements to be analogous to top hat tuned parts of a two element Yagi. I did not receive any Moxon examples in my copy of EZNEC but I am confident it would model it OK. I don't recall the feed details. de W8CCW John On Thu, 17 Aug 2006 15:18:44 -0400, jawod wrote: Thanks, Richard and Paul for answers about Beverage Here's another one, if you (or anyone) wants to chime in: There are about 4 paragraphs in the Antenna Book about Moxon design. Again, in contrast, lots of chatter about it on the newsgroups and on the air: Is this a viable alternative to larger yagis and quads? Specifically, there is an Optibeam OBW10-5. It appears to have a broad front lobe. But, it also appears to have a lower visible profile, a plus for the neighbors. Is it worth consideration? John AB8O John Ferrell W8CCW John Ferrell W8CCW |
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