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On Mon, 16 Feb 2009 18:49:47 GMT, "Jerry"
wrote: "JosephKK" wrote in message .. . On Tue, 10 Feb 2009 18:12:26 -0000, "christofire" wrote: "Jerry" wrote in message ... snip Chris Interesting article, it describes the Lindenblat array as a quartet of coaxial horns. Not the same as a quartet of dipoles at all. Hi Joseph I sent an E-mail to the address shown as yours in this group. I use EZNEC and have lots of files on various sizes and shapes of the DCA and other OmniAzimuth and Hemispheric coverage antennas. I'd be happy to share them with you if you E-mail me directly. I figure it will benefit me to see the facts and data that shows where I am mistaken about how the DCA better than the other hemispheric coverage antennas for LEO use. It is likely that I have overlooked something. maybe the DCA can be improved. Jerry KD6JDJ Jerry KD6JDJ I can retrieve the email. Thanks for the notice. I have done a bit of gedanken after the slant range issue was raised. A B o H ooo ooooo Let the group of "o" represent a polar view of earth, "A" represent satellite at azimuth (highest point in the sky), "B" represent satellite between azimuth and horizon, "Z" represent satellite very near the horizon, nominal orbital height 1000 miles above mean surface, and mean radius of earth of 4000 miles. Then range to the satellite at A is about 1000 miles, at B may be about 3000 miles and at H would be about 5000 miles. The arithmetic for relative sensitivity versus elevation angle can even be solved analytically, though 4 evenly spaced angles on either side of azimuth would be quite sufficient to plot the most even EIRP curves. Your DCA is notably more hemispherical than that. Can you tinker it up to get about 16 dB more at the horizon than at the azimuth? |
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