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Gentlemen,
If a man was of a mind to try to get some approximate antenna gain comparisons, how many wavelengths distant might you like to separate the antennas? The proposed scenario is this: make a pair of 2M dipoles, one for reference, one for receive. I was planning on using the local high school football field, which is on the order of 50 wl, give or take. Transmit a few mW at the design frequency, measure the signal strength, then repeat with an alternate antenna, say a j-pole, collinear, or something else. Now, this leaves out a whole bunch of useful information, that would be tough for me to measure, like spherical gain distribution, etc. I'm hoping for a figure of merit for the actual implementation of the tested antenna. (Which, as you can imagine, I could model and save myself the aggravation.) I was pondering all this, when it occurred to me that I could not easily determine when I get to the point where the square law behavior dominates. I've seen a couple of equations relating the antenna dimension to wavelength, but I must be really stupid today, because it's just not sinking in. Anyone care to comment? 73, Steve W1KF |
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