Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Richard" wrote in message ... "Tam/WB2TT" wrote in message ... "Richard" wrote in message ... Is anyone engaged is a design philosophy that seeks the design of VHF yagi's with the smallest acceptable diameter of elements? What you are trying to do is to design lighweight VHF yagis, you are seeking how small you can go with element diameters before performance begins to suffer. Richard, I think if it is heavy enough to physically support itself, it will be electrically OK. This turns out to be about 1/4 inch (6 mm) tubing at 50 MHz, and 1/8 inch (3mm) hard aluminum rod at 144 MHz and above. Tam/WB2TT Thanks. Of course over the years I'm used to seeing commercial TV and FM antennas which tend to use 3/8" and greater for elements and because just recently I've been comimg across designs using 4mm tubing it seems odd to me. As if there's just got to be some big losses or compromises on using say 4mm dia rod. But I now see that quite standard of course to use 3 and 4mm elements for high band VHFyagis. All is rather new to me. I should be seeing 4mm rod as the norm for a VHFhigh band yagi. Some of the variation in the size of tubing seems to depend on the quality of the tubing used. Any ham antenna I have seen uses seamless fairly hard alloy, whereas some TV antennas use a larger diameter rolled (if that is the right term) tubing of very thin material. Tam/WB2TT |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
VHF yagi element diameter | Antenna | |||
Putting antennas on house chimneys | Antenna | |||
Quad vs Yagi (or log) | Antenna | |||
Compact Yagi Design for VHF????????????????????????? | Antenna | |||
Poor quality low + High TV channels? How much dB in Preamp? | Antenna |