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![]() "a" wrote in message ... snip Thanks for the replies. I agree that the radiating element must be placed at the parabola focus to give minimal beamwidth, and that this condition is met when the radiating element is placed at the focus (which is given by D^2/16d). The point remains that I can still choose the parabola parameters to set the focal length to whatever is desired. Should I choose them so that the focal length is an odd or even number of quarter wavelengths? I don't think it matters. The gain signal off the parabolic reflector will be so very much stronger -- except for a small antenna. Do you have the gain formulas? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parabolic_antenna What I really had in mind was a uniformly radiating element (ie a simple whip) with a parabolic reflector behind it, like this:- ( x reflector radiating element To get the right-going signal from the reflector in phase with the right-going signal from the radiating element I need to choose the reflector distance correctly. This is an unusual concern; it's not common practice to have an "omni" feed for a parabolic. I have a feeling that there WILL be a phase inversion at the reflector but I'm not certain. The reason that I think that there might be a phase inversion is that the (radiator plus reflector) could be considered to be a (radiator and its image). At the (perfectly conducting) reflector the voltage will be zero and the current will be infinite, which implies that, at the reflector, the reflected wave must be phase inverted wrt the radiated wave. Any thoughts? |
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