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Rick wrote in
news ![]() Right. That's my point. So, what I'm claiming ... and trying to get someone who knows more about this stuff than I do (which is just about all of you) to confirm or deny ... is that with an NVIS dipole, someone 100 miles away from me would not be able to perceive the difference if my antenna was broadside to him or oriented in line with him. True, or false? I thought that was the meaning of this para that I wrote for you befo NVIS isn't strictly about the zenith, but an antenna that is omni at the zenith, and doesn't have deep nulls (dipole low over real ground), is close to omni at high elevations. The exact variation will depend on frequency, mounting height, ground parameters, and leg angles if an inverted V. If you could rotate such a dipole, I would defy you to reliably measure the out-of-omni above 50 deg elevation with an S meter. |
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