Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Fellows,
I've been wondering for some time now why amateur operators don't build their Yagi antenna's so they can be raised and lowered about 10ft in addition to being rotated. It seems to me that raising and lowering the height of a Yagi affects the take-off angle by at least several degrees, meaning that the signal delivery (target area) would be moved by at least many hundreds of miles. It would also affect the average wave incidence angle with the ionosphere, so one could tune (or peak) the signal significantly with a few feet of height adjustment. I am aware of stacked Yagi's being used by some contest stations, where variable phasing feed techniques between the upper and lower Yagi can (and does) affect take-off angle. I'm just suprised at how little literature and practical use of this technique exists. It can't be all that difficult to build a Yagi that can be winched, or slid up and down the side of the tower by several feet. Does anyone have a better theoretical understanding of the possible signal strength change from an ideal one-bounce propagation when a 20m Yagi is varied in height from .9 to 1.0 wavelength in height? How would a 0.1 wavelenght height change compare to a 30 degree rotation angle change? I know that some of the difficulty in quantifying the benefits of such a scheme is that the refractive layers of the atmosphere change in altitude regularly. So take-off/refraction/range calculations become cumbersome. But perhaps some fixed assumptions would allow some general statements about the typical gains vs. antenna heights for a fixed range. Thanks for any input on this apparently unusual technique. 73, CW-AI4MI |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Narrow lobe of a yagi | Antenna | |||
yagi boom question | Antenna | |||
900mhz yagi question | Scanner | |||
Yagi, OWA and Wideband Yagi etc etc | Antenna | |||
Quad vs Yagi (or log) | Antenna |