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"Richard Fry"
Lacking ~equal h-pol & v-pol gain at the same time, such a loop is not circularly polarized -- even though the physical configuration of the loop is a circle. _______________ After some thought and NEC studies to confirm, I need to modify my statement above--I'm used to thinking in terms of a broadcast antenna. In many directions this loop does have v-pol and h-pol gain at the same time, although not often equal gains. For example, a small, balanced, open loop oriented in the horizontal plane has a v-pol response along an elevation cut through the feedpoint and the opposite side of the loop that is zero in the horizontal plane, and max at the zenith and nadir. The h-pol azimuth field goes to zero for those conditions, and peaks at azimuths of +/-90 degrees from that. Other azimuths and elevations produce various combinations of h-pol and v-pol gain (rarely equal). Still, it would be a stretch to consider this antenna to be circularly polarized, in the classic sense. RF |
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