Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 21 Sep 2006 19:09:38 -0700, "art" wrote:
Notwithstanding that the upper half of the major lobe serves no usefull purpose to what the antenna is required for there is a mass of radiation in many directions and levels that have no connection to the required purpose of the antenna, thus we have a lot of wasted radiation that if we harness it so that it is used for the antennas primary use the efficiency of the antenna would increase immensly. Hi Art, The classic solution is to stack yagis vertically. This draws down the higher radiation lobes and puts their gain in the forward direction. However, unless you can positively insure that higher radiation does not actually find its way to the target (you need a propagation modeler to prove that, by the way), then you could be muffling yourself at one elevation to yell at another elevation that is only heard in points remote from the target. In other words, if you suppress the lobe at 20 degrees to optimize the lobe at 10 degrees, you may miss your target altogether. Given that skip works on so many variables, an "efficient" antenna may be wholly useless. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Tape Measure Yagi Antenna Questions | Antenna | |||
SUPER J-POLE BEATS YAGI BY 1 dB | Antenna | |||
GP -> yagi driven element? | Antenna | |||
Yagi, OWA and Wideband Yagi etc etc | Antenna | |||
Quad vs Yagi (or log) | Antenna |