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Roy
I understand where you are coming from but your points are all based around a Yagi with standard feeds !. In my past postings over the years I have pointed out other methods of feeds that not only broaden the bandwidth but uses a high impedance, this done by extreme "close" coupling, in the order of a inch or so upwards to about 12 inches which I also wrote up in a patent some years ago just for kicks. I myself ,choose not to go less than 26 ohms when designing. and tho I can make them with very high impedance it is not really required as the ham bands are quite narrow. Where I really concentrate upon is to move away from "mutual" coupling ( what ever that means) which is commonly described with yagi antennas, to "close" coupling designs which is an entirely new world when dealing with feed impedances, as Richards post on coupling some months ago described so much better than I have done. Regards Art "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... There's yet another tradeoff -- bandwidth, of both the pattern and the impedance. Close spacing, in particular, reduces the range of frequencies over which the pattern is acceptable ("acceptable" being in itself subject to compromise) and over which the SWR is acceptable. But close spaced or not, it's much easier to tweak a design to work perfectly at a single frequency than make one that will retain some semblance of that perfection over a wider range of frequencies. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Richard Harrison wrote: Art Unwin wrote: "But my main question still remains a pointer to a technical article that discusses the possibility or impossibility of what I have stated." I don`t get the question, but it seems to me, Art wants to know if anyone has written of a method to make maximum gain correspond with maximum front-to-back ratio in a Yagi. I haven`t seen it. There is a third factor in the compromise, 50-ohm feedpoint (or some other convenient impedance). snip. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |