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Hello, Ian.
Yes, I was a bit hasty in citing Moxon. But thinking a little more about this I wonder. Intuitively, and looking at Moxon's sketch, it would seem that the effect would be simply to rotate the vertical pattern by the amount of the slope. Aiming the pattern "down the slope" rather than "toward the horizon" does not seem to be a necessarily worse situation as Moxon suggests. Wouldn't that actually put more energy out toward the horizon? Tilting a VHF ground plane antenna toward the horizon would be different because the vertical pattern at zero degrees is not attenuated by ground losses. Chuck Ian White, G3SEK wrote: chuck wrote: Don't know from personal experience, but Les Moxon, author of HF Antennas for all Locations, seems to believe it creates an advantage. You might want to read his thoughts on that. The advantages of which Moxon wrote are for *horizontal* polarization only. If the antenna height above ground is correct, the ground reflection can reinforce low-angle radiation in the downslope direction. But Moxon also shows specifically that there are *no* such advantages for vertical polarization. The ground-reflected ray is lost at a high angle. |
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