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![]() Roy Lewallen wrote: Let me encourage you to build a vertical antenna and arrage a switch so you can switch back and forth between it and your dipole. Be sure to use a current balun or two in your dipole feedline so it doesn't become part of the test. Here's what I think you'll find, as I have when comparing a vertical to a horizontal antenna. At times, one antenna will be spectacularly better than the other -- by 20 dB or more. After a while, maybe a minute or so, the signal on the good antenna will fade, and when you switch you'll find that the other antenna is now a lot better than the formerly good one, by about the same amount. This cycle can go on for quite a while. This is likely due to polarization rotation (although multipath can cause a similar effect, if the antennas are spaced far enough apart); whichever antenna has the right polarization for the moment will be much better than the other. Thats pretty close...They flip flop back and forth... I don't believe you'll find any spectacular overall improvement by using the vertical. Depends on the length of the path, and the frequency. On 40m at night, the improvement using the vertical is spectacular *if* the path is long enough. But that will vary. At 500 miles, usually the dipole will win. At 1000 miles, usually they will be about even. At 1500 miles the usual amount on the S meter is about 2 s units in favor of the vertical. At 4000+ miles, can be 4 s units. But of course, this will vary to the quality of the vertical. In my case, was a full size ground plane, 4 radials, up 36 feet at the base. The dipole was at 36 feet. Same height as the base of the GP. My 40 meter mobile antenna is almost always better than my 36 ft high dipole to either of the coasts. I've tested that many times to Fla. On say a 1500 mile path, usually the vertical will hold the best overall, maybe 90 percent of the time, but you will see the shift where they flip flop for a short time, and then flip back... Sometimes the flop will leave them about equal. When back to "normal", the vertical will be noticably better..2 s units in that 1500 mile case...The vertical will be better a lot larger percentage of the time, than the dipole. I've seen many cases where the dipole never is as loud as the vertical, no matter what the shift...But thats usually on the longer paths. The longer the path, the larger the vertical advantage. To say VK land, I've never seen the vertical less than 3-4 s units better than the dipole at 36 ft. And I was on about 3 times a week to check at that time. That dipole would have to be a whole lot higher than 36 ft to even come close to the ground plane I ran. When doing these tests, don't make the mistake of assuming the units on your S-meter are some particular number of dB, unless you have the abililty to actually measure them. Any assumption you make could be WAY off. True...I make no claim to actual db increase....But I do use switches, and get a good A/B comparison...BTW...I think the vertical advantage on long paths decreases as you go higher in frequency...Maybe cuz the dipoles are higher in wavelength??? Not sure...Seems to be more a lower band, nighttime thing...The types of propagation at night vs day may be a factor...MK |
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