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On Feb 3, 7:51 pm, "Ralph Mowery" wrote:
Has anyone modeled what happens to the signal of a triband 3 element antenna that has one or more of the elements that has slipped on the boom say 10 or 20 deg ? Also saw in an old magazine an antenna for 2 meters that had each element offset by about 5 or 10 deg around the boom to produce circular polarization. Will this actually work or is it wishful thinking ? I've modeled similar things for sensitivity analysis of a design. From a theoretical standpoint, what happens is that the mutual coupling between the elements is reduced (to a first order, by cosine(angle)), which changes the amplitudes and phases of currents in the elements. Net result.. not much change in forward gain (unless it's a very high gain design with a lot of superdirectivity), pretty big changes in F/ B, if it was previously optimized for that. (that is, the nulls get shallower.. a 1% change in currents can make a 20 dB null into a 17 dB null) As for making CP.. it might work, it might not. depends a lot on the design. A Lindenblad makes CP with two elements about 60 degrees apart. On CP in general.. it's easy to make elliptical pol.. tough to make perfectly circular. This is particularly true if you want CP in multiple directions (and it may not even be possible, depending on how many directions.. viz the "hairy ball theorem"). |
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