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Art Unwin wrote:
"Actually, I see nothing wrong with such an assembly and in fact have seen a military configuration such as this where two such antennas were used in a V shaped form where the narrow ends were placed together and enclosing an approx 30 degree angle." Such an antenna may be called a pyramidal log-periodic. A version is included in Kraus on page 398. Its boom-separation angle is 60 degrees. A pyramidal log periodic is the cover story in the July 1969 "Popular Electronics". This is a construction article beginning on page 27. The author is George Monser. It uses 17 rods on each boom, every rod different from the others on a boom. Separation angle for the booms is also 60 degrees. This antenna covers VHF and UHF TV and FM broadcast bands. It is said to match 300-ohm feedline over the range and produce enough gain for "deep-fringe" color reception. The longest element (not aligned end-to-end as a dipole) is 115-in. tip to tip, or 1/2-wave at about 51 MHz. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
Many thanks to all who contributed to this thread, I visited the Lab
again today and realised that they have corrected the mistake! :) I don't know if it's because of my insistence, or that they just couldn't get it to work properly, but to see a result is pleasing! More power to your (collective) elbow! |
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