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I did not see this in L.B.'s article ( in a quick read through) and it
would seem to go against the basic premise that takeoff angle is solely a function of height above ground. I did a loop model in AO and did not see any changes in takeoff angle as I changed loop circumference. Can you point me to the section. Look at the first three figures with elevation plots for an 80m loop at 3.5, 7 and 14 MHz and see how the elevation angle falls with frequency (as well as with height). This performance is scalable, so consider these 3 figures as a loop of size one, two and four wavelengths. Then 80m/3.5 is the same as a 160m loop at 1.8 MHz, and 80m/7 MHz is the same as a 2*160m loop at 1.8 MHz and so on. From this follows the results that a loop is a cloud warmer (NVIS) at 1 wavelength and becomes a better and better DX antenna as frequency increases. But only up to a point, as a 160m loop at 28 MHz does not fully develop its main lobes and loses gain compared to a 80m loop at 28 MHz, the same with a 2*160m loop at 14 MHz and so on. Sverre LA3ZA |