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![]() "Denny" wrote in message oups.com... As soon as you explain what you mean by "efficiency" I can answer that in detail.. What do you mean by efficiency? Is efficiency 100% of applied power being in the forward lobe and 0% in sidelobes or rear lobes? If so, better get a new hobby because it ain't gonna happen... Can't happen due to the laws of physics... For discussion I'm going to assume that this is your goal... Let's go up a bit in frequency where the antennas are small and easy to work with... Telescopes... The only difference between blue light and 20 meters is the frequency... Now those telescopes are some really high gain antennas.. So, here we have this super, duper, high gain antenna (I don't know what the gain in DBI is, but it is huge, man, huge)... And we point it at a really faint signal, say the star Rigel - which is an Isotropic radiator - a point source... And we adjust the resonance (focus) for the best possible signal we can get... We put a slit on the telescope and scan across that signal and gasp it has side lobes! Not all the power luminence is in the main lobe... Mathematically there will always be side lobes off the main lobe... By reciprocity, it is impossible to focus a point souce of light down to a point... The center brilliance will be sorrounded by circles of confusion lobes... Like wise it is impossible to build an antenna that has a response that is only a single main lobe and no side lobes... 'Now, we can build arrays of antennas that enhance the main lobe and diminish the side and rear lobes through pattern multiplication, and we can get those unwanted lobes down to a few thousandths of the power in the main lobe... One way is a broadside array of six of a dozen, or so, more point sources with half wave spacing and fed in Quadrature, or other current variations... Krause's book has a good set of patterns and explanation of this method of synthesizing an antenna that is very "efficient"... efficiency being defined as I 'assumed' above... However, these antennas are not efficient in terms of time, labor, size, cost, and complexity... So, to reiterate, go to Reisert, and Krause, and Terman, et. al. to find your magically 'efficient' antenna... denny / k8do btw, a thought just caught me... W8JI on his web site has a great table of antenna 'efficiency' in low noise receiving antennas... Maybe this is what you mean... GO look it up.. Hi Denny You seemed to have missed the point completely. Maybe your news reader didnt supply you with the original post where Art refers to Efficiency of a Yagi as being low. Art finally agreed that the efficiency he refers to with his Yagi is the Power IN divided by Power Out kind of efficiency. Since I consider the statement that the Yagi antenna is I squared R lossy to be entirely erroneous, I realized that I had no place in such a frivilous discussion. Now I find it difficult to understand why you want to write so extensively about telescopes, and broadside arrays, and sidelobes when we are considering Efficiency. You may want to refer to Apperature Efficiency, but, you are doing a poor job of it. Whats with you Denny??? Why do you think of yourself as so superior that you raise your voice at me telling me to "GO look it up". Jerry |
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