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Richard Harrison wrote:
Bob, VE7HS wrote: "I had an 80 metre loop some years ago, in a noisy urban enviroment, and had the opposite experience, which is why I was interested in trying it." According to Bill Orr, W6SAI in "All About Cubical Quad Antennas" the full-wave loop produces a power gain of about 1.4 dB over the 1/2-wave dipole and its feedpoint impedance is about 125 ohms when the center of the loop is about 0.65 wavelengths above the earth. Take off paterns depend on soil, polarization, and height. ON4UN does a good job with charts, graphs, and illustrations in his chapter on "Large Loop Antennas" in "Low-Band DXing". I have copies of both, but the problem is that all the material refers to loops at low heights above ground, which is not what I'm looking at. When the loop is vertically polarized over good soil, and the center of the loop is 0.17 wavelengths above the earth, the elevation angle peaks about 21 degrees above the horizon. Yes, apparently depending on where you feed it. Thanks, Richard. |
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