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![]() "Richard Harrison" wrote Mark wrote: "Is this practical?" Trees near an antenna cause some loss. It`s hard to quantify in advance, but in ww-2, the signal corps estimated that hf loss is usually negligible if horizontal polarization is used (page 241 of 'electrical communications engineering'). I`ve found that horizontal HF dipoles, directly fed by coax in various Bolivian Chaco Jungle sites, below the the tree canopy, but not too close to the trees, communicated well with Cochabamba and La Paz, Bolivia. So, the dipoles didn`t suffer too much from the trees. The Signal Corps was right. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI Hi Richard, it's not easy to compare your rainforest canopy to loblolly pines, but at approximately 50' my dipole is well below the pine canopy, and well surrounded by them. If there is an impact from the pine trees it would be hard to quantify since the dipole exceeds everyone's expectations for short and long range performance. We have heard comments that pine-fron clusters when wet, affect a near field, but that has not been our experience. Neither does snow, ice or winds. Overall, there appears to be no effect on the antenna being in fairly close proximity to many tall trees, and suspended from them. Best regards, Jack |
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