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![]() "Zack" wrote in message ups.com... Harold E. Johnson 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 --Zack Lau W1VT More than likely, mesh in the reflector is too big and parabolic perfection is poorer at the higher frequency According to my interpretation of material written by Dick Knadle, K2RIW published in the ARRL Antenna Book, a reflector error on the order of 1 inch peak to peak results in a gain deterioration of 0.3 dB on 1420MHz. I doubt the mesh adds more than another 0.2 dB of loss. There is still another 1.5 dB of loss to account for the lower efficiency. Could the dish be optimized for receiving, sacrificing some gain for a better gain to temperature ratio? Zack Lau W1VT W4ZCB Please be a bit more careful where you plan your responses Zack, I wasn't the one that posed that question above. I suppose that they could be under-illuminating the dish in order to suppress the "hot" ground behind it. For a dish that size though, one inch is awfully tight. Why don't you ask them? W4ZCB |
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