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![]() "Richard Harrison" wrote in message ... Art, KB9MZ wrote: "O.K. Reg, I`ll take you up on the 50 dB F/B." It requires good balance for such cancellation. Yes, it will not come by accident but Reg has said that 50 db F/B is "silly"! Why would he say that without back up evidence? He also did not offer a max F/B that was obtainable in theory. I have seen computor results that offer 50 db F/B based on NEC, Can I trust gain if F/B cannot be trusted? Obviously 50 db is hard to get but is it beyond the realms of possibility? The F/B that you offered is a bit unfair but then it is an antenna and Reg did not qualify his statement. I personaly modelled a antenna that comprised of a driven element with the remaining elements acting as reflectors only. And we all know that extra reflectors are a waste of time for H.F.( grin ) but they do give very high F/B figures. I wonder what a corner reflector antenna would provide Regards Art KB9MZ......XG Kraus gives the gain for a 100-meter dish near Bonn, Germany on page 676 of the 3rd edition of "Antennas". Gain is a function of frequency and varies from about 48 dB at 300 MHz to about 98 dB at 150 GHz. I don`t know if shielding has been added to make this a "high-performance" dish but I would wager that this enormous radio ear and mouth has an excellent front-to-back ratio. Probably exceeds forward gain at some azimuths and elevation angles. Arnold B. Bailey has a lot to say anout a "connected" (driven) element and a parasitic reflector, starting about on 447 of "TV and Other Receiving Antennas", Bailey says: "The optimum spacing for highest gain of a parasitic reflector is S=0.15 wavelength plus or minus 0.025. Here the relleector is operated at Q=+1 (longer than resonant) and the gain in direction 1 is approximately 5.5 dB. Reasonable compromise for a less critical system is to use a spacing of 0.2 wavelength and a parasitic element longer than resonant (at Q=+1). This case gives a gain in direction 1 of 5 dB." On page 440 Bailey says: The front-to-back ratio ---is 17.5 dB in this case, and the Y/X ratio only about 9 dB, where +X represents the optimum direction.---" A picture is worth 1000 words. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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