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![]() Every reference and factory specification for standard grounplane and vertical dipole antennas I've seen indicates the standard vertical dipole has a horizontal gain of 3 dBi, and the groundplane 2.1 dBi. Those are pretty curious references then. Why would they dwell on the HORIZONTAL gains of VERTICAL antennas? There must be something left unsaid in what you are trying to express because cross polarization would drive down sensitivities by 20 to 30 dB. For another matter, those values you quote bear very little resemblence to typical 2M FM operation, unless it is from the Space Shuttle. Height above ground variations in gain easily washes over any differences you might perceive. I can see a variation of 2dB in just raising a groundplane from 40" off the turf to 120". Richard, You and I seem to be talking different languages !! :^) My reference to horizontal gain is gain measured in the horizontal plane...... that is, measurements are taken broadside to the vertical antenna elements, in this case, both the vertical dipole and a groundplane. Gain measurements taken in any other plane in any other plane than horizontal tend to be rather useless since most VHF mobile communications takes place horizontally..... even distant repeaters tend to be close to the horizon. Cross polarization is not an issue in VHF operations since all commercial and amateur FM operations I'm familiar with use vertical polarization. As far as height variations having effect on gain.... you are talking about path gain, or system gain. I am speaking specifically of antenna gain, which I believed to be the question of the original poster. And as I have already pointed out, most factory specifications for vertical dipoles and groundplane antennas are as I already listed. Ed K7AAT |
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