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Not totally sure of your physical concept, but the free space net patterns of single, quadrature-fed h-pol and v-pol, 1/2 wave dipoles having coincident radiation centers will be essentially c-pol on the planes normal to the two dipoles, and essentially v-pol off the ends of the horizontal dipole. This is a common element configuration to generate c-pol in FM/TV broadcast panel antenna arrays. Two h-pol dipoles in a turnstile arrangement would be more omnidirectional, in the azimuth plane. RF Visit http://rfry.org for FM broadcast RF system papers. ____________________ "Richard" wrote in message ... A turnstile is a horizontally polarized antenna. Big downer is that from a polar radiation POV, from the sides, it's got a minus figure. Like -2db or something. Okay, flipp the turnstile so you have one dipole vertical. Not a turnstle anymore, and the element configuration will respond favourably to both vertical and horizontal radiation. But: 1) Do you have to wire up the "flipped turnstle" in a different way in order, at the same time, (without any switching) to take advantage of: a) mixed polarized waves? b) vertical or horizontal waves? 2) If you put up a "flipped turstile" and you wire it up to handle mixed, vertical or horizontal waves, what is the polar radiation patter in the horizontal plane (ie from the sides) ? Still a minus? clip |
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