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Old February 27th 08, 10:20 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default ? 75M Inverted Vee GAIN

After Google search no luck on any data on gain for this antenna.
Just installed with apex at 33 feet and has 27 degrees full length is
116.63 feet long and has a reduced length of 2.064%. Is there any
gain over a point incident antenna?
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Old February 27th 08, 10:47 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default ? 75M Inverted Vee GAIN

Sonny Hood wrote:
After Google search no luck on any data on gain for this antenna.
Just installed with apex at 33 feet and has 27 degrees full length is
116.63 feet long and has a reduced length of 2.064%. Is there any
gain over a point incident antenna?


You can model that antenna with the free demo version
of EZNEC available from
www.eznec.com.

Your configuration is unclear. How far above ground
are the ends of the inverted V?
--
73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com
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Old February 28th 08, 01:29 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default ? 75M Inverted Vee GAIN

Cecil, the antenna ends are 6.3 feet above earth ground which is
approx. 5 feet above the water table. I haven't used the program, yet.

On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 22:47:30 GMT, Cecil Moore
wrote:

Sonny Hood wrote:
After Google search no luck on any data on gain for this antenna.
Just installed with apex at 33 feet and has 27 degrees full length is
116.63 feet long and has a reduced length of 2.064%. Is there any
gain over a point incident antenna?


You can model that antenna with the free demo version
of EZNEC available from
www.eznec.com.

Your configuration is unclear. How far above ground
are the ends of the inverted V?


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Old February 27th 08, 10:57 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default ? 75M Inverted Vee GAIN

Sonny Hood wrote:
After Google search no luck on any data on gain for this antenna.
Just installed with apex at 33 feet and has 27 degrees full length is
116.63 feet long and has a reduced length of 2.064%. Is there any
gain over a point incident antenna?


What sort of accuracy are you looking for? At what frequency?
length of 116.63 ft implies you're working 75 or 80m? So the feedpoint
is 10m (1/8th wavelength) off the ground?

You'll have some directivity over an isotrope, but not as much as a
dipole. You'll almost certainly have some loss due to the ground.

27 degrees is the droop? Endpoints about 6 feet off the ground?

Assuming "average soil" and copper wire.

-2.5dBi straight up is the peak gain

At 15 degrees above the horizon, about -6dBi off the end, about -7.5dBi
broadside.
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Old February 27th 08, 11:05 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default ? 75M Inverted Vee GAIN

The gain and pattern will be very close to that of a dipole at a height
of about 24 feet. Maximum field strength will be straight up, and quite
dependent on the ground characteristics.

What's a point incident antenna?

Roy Lewallen, W7EL

Sonny Hood wrote:
After Google search no luck on any data on gain for this antenna.
Just installed with apex at 33 feet and has 27 degrees full length is
116.63 feet long and has a reduced length of 2.064%. Is there any
gain over a point incident antenna?



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Old February 28th 08, 01:34 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default ? 75M Inverted Vee GAIN

On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 15:05:54 -0800, Roy Lewallen
wrote:

The gain and pattern will be very close to that of a dipole at a height
of about 24 feet. Maximum field strength will be straight up, and quite
dependent on the ground characteristics.

What's a point incident antenna?

Hi Roy, I consider it the radiation point of a "0" length element
which radiates in spherical direction.
Roy Lewallen, W7EL

Sonny Hood wrote:
After Google search no luck on any data on gain for this antenna.
Just installed with apex at 33 feet and has 27 degrees full length is
116.63 feet long and has a reduced length of 2.064%. Is there any
gain over a point incident antenna?


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Old February 28th 08, 01:50 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default ? 75M Inverted Vee GAIN

Sonny Hood wrote:
Roy Lewallen wrote:
What's a point incident antenna?

Hi Roy, I consider it the radiation point of a "0" length element
which radiates in spherical direction.


It's called an isotropic antenna and that's where the
'i' in dBi comes from.
--
73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com
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Old February 28th 08, 07:44 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default ? 75M Inverted Vee GAIN

Sonny Hood wrote:
On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 15:05:54 -0800, Roy Lewallen
wrote:

The gain and pattern will be very close to that of a dipole at a height
of about 24 feet. Maximum field strength will be straight up, and quite
dependent on the ground characteristics.

What's a point incident antenna?

Hi Roy, I consider it the radiation point of a "0" length element
which radiates in spherical direction.


Oh, that would be an isotropic source. Gain relative to an isotropic
source usually assumes that the source is in free space, so you get an
automatic 3 dB of gain when you restrict your antenna to a hemisphere by
adding a ground plane.

There's no single answer to your question, since the gain is strikingly
different in each direction and at each elevation angle. The maximum
gain occurs straight up, and you'd only be interested in that figure if
you're doing NVIS work -- and it would vary quite markedly depending on
ground conditions.

The simplest way to find the gain relative to isotropic (dBi) at any
particular azimuth or elevation angle is by modeling. The free EZNEC
demo program at http://eznec.com is adequate, and the Test Drive
tutorial in the included manual takes you through the building of a
similar antenna. You can easily modify the example to imitate your antenna.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL
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Old March 3rd 08, 05:28 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default ? 75M Inverted Vee GAIN

Sonny Hood wrote:
On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 15:05:54 -0800, Roy Lewallen
wrote:


The gain and pattern will be very close to that of a dipole at a height
of about 24 feet. Maximum field strength will be straight up, and quite
dependent on the ground characteristics.

What's a point incident antenna?


Hi Roy, I consider it the radiation point of a "0" length element
which radiates in spherical direction.



Careful there. A "zero length" (or infinitesimal) dipole (aka a
Hertzian dipole) does not have an isotropic (spherical) pattern. It has
1.64dBi directivity, as I recall.
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Old March 3rd 08, 08:02 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default ? 75M Inverted Vee GAIN

Jim Lux wrote:
Sonny Hood wrote:
On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 15:05:54 -0800, Roy Lewallen
wrote:


The gain and pattern will be very close to that of a dipole at a
height of about 24 feet. Maximum field strength will be straight up,
and quite dependent on the ground characteristics.

What's a point incident antenna?


Hi Roy, I consider it the radiation point of a "0" length element
which radiates in spherical direction.



Careful there. A "zero length" (or infinitesimal) dipole (aka a
Hertzian dipole) does not have an isotropic (spherical) pattern. It has
1.64dBi directivity, as I recall.


His definition fits the description of an isotropic antenna. It's not a
dipole or any other kind of real antenna, and has a directivity of one
by definition.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL


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