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On 12 Feb, 05:02, "AndyS" wrote:
Andy writes; I know I could go to my EZNEC and find this out for myself, but I figure someone here has already done this and a quick answer is all I need.. In "normal" Yagi antennae, the elements are parallel and at 90 degrees to the mounting boom. In some TV antennae, the elements are at an angle to the mounting boom, slanted in the direction of the station being received. Otherwise, they look pretty much like a Yagi. My question is, what effect does "slanting" the elements forward have on the impedance, and the pattern ? [ [ [ [ [ [ Normal Yagi Slanted Yagi Thanks in advance for the meaningful answers.. Andy W4OAH Very true, a yagi is a planar antenna i.e on a single plane whereas only one element is resonant and where ALL others are parasitic. This also holds true for a log periodic except the frequency is a variable which selects the element closest to resonance for the theoretical feed point i.e. of matching impedance to the feed point impedance. The point about just one element that is resonant is the reason in my mind that antenna advancement has been retarded over the last hundred years excabated by the design of the yagi which is really an empirical design that denies the simplicity of normal radiation and its corresponding mathematics. Now I know somebody will immediately jump to the dual driven element forms but that is beside the point under discussion. Art |
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