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#72
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On 24 Sep 2006 16:11:33 -0700, "art" wrote:
You can squeese the main lobe as much as you want for extra gain but it will not change the vbolume of the main lobe one iota Art, You know that your arguments sound like you are trying to crucify yourself and expect applause? When we discard the errant nonsense, almost every posting you make here is weighed with material of self-defeating goals. The quote above is a remarkable admission that you reject the solution you seek. When you paint yourself into a corner, what color is the floor? 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#73
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Hi Art,
art wrote: It is the highest point for the U.K. period I don't understand. I thought you were in Indiana and wanting to optimize your path to England. As I said above mine is not a planar array. The computor program I use is AO-PRO by Beasley That's the best there is in my opinion. You are fortunate to have a copy since he no longer sells to hams. Thanks for the contact The most interesting thing that I am looking forward to is operation at the bottom of the cycle to see if there is still propagation but only for low angles. As you gat older you look for any excuse to stay indoors You're welcome. Here is a long but interesting story related to low angle TOAs. W3CRA was a legend and I can vividly remember him working one Asian after another that I could not detect the slightest trace of using a 3 element Yagi at 60' from my home in NC at that time: http://users.vnet.net/btippett/w3cra.htm Good luck with your new system! 73, Bill W4ZV |
#74
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Just read your page... very interestin. We don't have large hills in
Illinois but a helicoptor pilot stated that this town is visible for miles around and another ham told me that the DX bureu staed that this town got more cards than all of Chicago I remember once when I gave a local talk where I spoke about Lawson and his work and I repeated some of his statements. Well I was challenged on some things but since I am not a DXer they and the suurounding counties waited until a rare station was comming on and taking only three stations from each district. Boy I got a shock with the noise and pandemonium and couldnt see how any station could be picked out but I was fortunate plus two in the Chicago area. I know I was very lucky and have no idea why people collect those things or enter contests... the noise is horrible I think I had 13 elements on a 60 foot boom at that time plus a couple of reflectors to experiment with. From that moment on I gave up on aluminum elements and now use exclusively telescopic fishing poles with an aluminum shell as it is cheaper in the long run and not susceptable to ice build up Art Artl wrote: Hi Art, art wrote: It is the highest point for the U.K. period I don't understand. I thought you were in Indiana and wanting to optimize your path to England. As I said above mine is not a planar array. The computor program I use is AO-PRO by Beasley That's the best there is in my opinion. You are fortunate to have a copy since he no longer sells to hams. Thanks for the contact The most interesting thing that I am looking forward to is operation at the bottom of the cycle to see if there is still propagation but only for low angles. As you gat older you look for any excuse to stay indoors You're welcome. Here is a long but interesting story related to low angle TOAs. W3CRA was a legend and I can vividly remember him working one Asian after another that I could not detect the slightest trace of using a 3 element Yagi at 60' from my home in NC at that time: http://users.vnet.net/btippett/w3cra.htm Good luck with your new system! 73, Bill W4ZV |
#75
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Richard
why don't you get with it instead of the constant adverserial role Go to the library and get a good book on antennas and maybe study up on curls? Oh shucks I forgot you were bald... Never mind keep talking to yourself and maybe there will be an echo for you to talk to and belittle. Frankly to me you are just a bore that struts around in shakesperian tights and write in the language of my forefathers and glory only in your perceived triumps in the repair shop. Why not go back and try to repair some shoes of some people which you cannot fill See you finally got a response but don't bank on a lot more until you become less adverserial with respect to all work other than your own and provide the same respect that you one time would like to receive Put me in your plonk file and I will respond also Art Richard Clark wrote: On 24 Sep 2006 16:11:33 -0700, "art" wrote: You can squeese the main lobe as much as you want for extra gain but it will not change the vbolume of the main lobe one iota Art, You know that your arguments sound like you are trying to crucify yourself and expect applause? When we discard the errant nonsense, almost every posting you make here is weighed with material of self-defeating goals. The quote above is a remarkable admission that you reject the solution you seek. When you paint yourself into a corner, what color is the floor? 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#76
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![]() "art" wrote in message I know I was very lucky and have no idea why people collect those things or enter contests... the noise is horrible I think I had 13 elements on a 60 foot boom at that time plus a couple of reflectors to experiment with. Art, Why do people run Marathons, race cars, boats, airplanes or turtles? Some like to walk, some roll in the mud, some like to compete in the stadium. Contesters like to prove that they can design better antennas, assemble better stations and prove that they are better operators. It is also real test for antenna designs and propagation knowledge and how to exploit both for better results that can quantify the performance and weed out junk and junk science. It takes years of devotion to show up in the top ten listings. If you have revolutionary design, we contesters will be first, dying to use it and cream the competition - that's the real test and not mumbo-jumbo claims. BTW I have a "secret weapon" too, it is a ferrite stick in the dish. Very efficient, no side lobes, one sharp beam, no side or back lobes. It is right up there with EH, Freaktals and perpetual motion machines. If you assume that propagation between you and UK is as you describe, you are way off. We are also ducting, use skewed path and changing angles depending on the point in the sunspot cycle, sun' activity, etc. etc. So for optimum propagation one needs either antenna that has wider beamwidth or sharp and stearable one in H and V planes. Can you enlighten us about your new revolutionary invention? Is it better than your patented reflector that is shorter than the driven element? 73 |
#77
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Wow Yuri has arrived
I remember that long discusting arguement he had with Tom Rauch that brought words to the fore that brought shame to amateur radio I'm gone, I want no part of what is now on the near horizon Have a great year fellars I enjoyed the short visit while it lasted Art Yuri Blanarovich wrote: "art" wrote in message I know I was very lucky and have no idea why people collect those things or enter contests... the noise is horrible I think I had 13 elements on a 60 foot boom at that time plus a couple of reflectors to experiment with. Art, Why do people run Marathons, race cars, boats, airplanes or turtles? Some like to walk, some roll in the mud, some like to compete in the stadium. Contesters like to prove that they can design better antennas, assemble better stations and prove that they are better operators. It is also real test for antenna designs and propagation knowledge and how to exploit both for better results that can quantify the performance and weed out junk and junk science. It takes years of devotion to show up in the top ten listings. If you have revolutionary design, we contesters will be first, dying to use it and cream the competition - that's the real test and not mumbo-jumbo claims. BTW I have a "secret weapon" too, it is a ferrite stick in the dish. Very efficient, no side lobes, one sharp beam, no side or back lobes. It is right up there with EH, Freaktals and perpetual motion machines. If you assume that propagation between you and UK is as you describe, you are way off. We are also ducting, use skewed path and changing angles depending on the point in the sunspot cycle, sun' activity, etc. etc. So for optimum propagation one needs either antenna that has wider beamwidth or sharp and stearable one in H and V planes. Can you enlighten us about your new revolutionary invention? Is it better than your patented reflector that is shorter than the driven element? 73 |
#78
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On 24 Sep 2006 19:34:22 -0700, "art" wrote:
Put me in your plonk file Shirley, you jest! And miss all the weeping and your lush interpretation of Camille at the Hammerlund? It took you 30 posts to get around to one significant factor in propagation: the frequency you were working! 73's and XOXOXOXOX Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#79
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![]() art wrote: When one looks at a.radiating array pattern one can see that the yagi is very inefficient. Does anybody know of the relative volume contained in the main radiation lobe versus the total volume of the entire pattern? I know there are a lot of different type antenna gains and arrangement but I am trying to determine in an informal way the efficiency ratio and compare it to what would appear to be a very efficient antenna such as a dish. A casual look at a yagi radiation pattern would suggest Does anyone know why the efficiency of the Stanford Big Dish (150 feet) is only 35% on 1420MHz, compared to 55% on 150 and 400MHz? http://www-star.stanford.edu/rsg/bigdish.php --Zack Lau W1VT that it is less than 50% efficient at best especially when considering DX work where even the main lobe is less than 50% efficient when looking at available signal paths beyond 4000 miles which are somewhat below 12 degrees and where the main lobe itself is centered between 13 and 14 degrees with an average amateur antennah Art |
#80
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On 26 Sep 2006 10:31:14 -0700, "Zack" wrote:
Does anyone know why the efficiency of the Stanford Big Dish (150 feet) is only 35% on 1420MHz, compared to 55% on 150 and 400MHz? http://www-star.stanford.edu/rsg/bigdish.php Hi Zack, You may be confusing (or have been confused with the content of this thread) antenna effeciency with system efficiency. The page makes the point of there being a feed "appropriateness." I would suspect the method of feed makes the difference (and those issues that lie beyond that include method of detection, noise, and so on). As for putting it to the antenna's merit, the roughness is far more significant to shorter wavelengths (roughness is on order of eight wave). This in itself produces problems of phase control, and phase control is the name of the game in directivity. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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