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On Mon, 25 Apr 2005 02:47:25 +0000, Scott
wrote: Amen brother! There may be better designs, but the Quagi has to be near the top in the catecories you mentioned, and I agree with everything you said. Besides, the proof is in the pudding...106 miles on 5 Watts! Almost unheard of around here (Wisconsin). I'd be pleased with that for sure! Scott N0EDV Well, I did cheat a little bit - was up a couple thousand feet on a mountain. If you're interested and have a good atlas or online map service, my location is the LA area and the repeater is located pretty darn close the intersection of the 405 and 105 freeways and I was located close to the intersection of the 14 and 395 highways. Now get busy and build the 222 mHz version 8-} 73, Howard KE6MAK Howard wrote: On Sun, 24 Apr 2005 03:14:27 +0000, Scott wrote: Might be interesting to someone out there.... I built a copy of the 432 Quagi (8 elements) that appeared in the 1988 ARRL Antenna Book. It has a "claimed" gain of 13 dBi (which, if I remember right, is 10.8 dBd). I didn't lament over getting all the elements within 1/128" of an inch ![]() significantly is that I needed to move the first director about 3" forward of the original design to get a better match. I have no idea what this will do to the radiation pattern. As designed, mine had a best SWR of 2:1, causing the solid state final in the Yaesu 857 to start shutting down such that I was getting about 6 or 7 Watts out instead of 20. Moving the first director forward as noted got the SWR to 1.2:1. Much as I would expect since a quad element at resonance is about 60 Ohms I believe. Anyhow... Measured it on the antenna range today at our VHF group's (http://www.nlrs.org) annual get-together. My antenna came in with a 9.6 dBd gain. I can live with that! It was only 0.3 dB below the reference antenna, an 11 element Yagi. Seems to have a very sharp pattern! Anybody have experience with this type antenna? I was impressed enough to think about giving the 222 version a try... Scott N0EDV Scott, A few years back I scaled that 432 design to 440 and while I didn't measure the gain, I found that the match wasn't bad (about 1.3:1) on the first try - so I left it. That could have to do with the fact that all I really scaled were the element lengths and I left the spacing as-is. As to performance? Grand! The company radio club had a "far and away" contest - who could hit the repeater from the farthest distance; my straight line distance from the repeater was 106 miles (gotta love GPS) and using 5 watts I had workable voice contact. As Tom suggests in his post, there are better designs - however, I think that on a "dollar per dB" basis and ease of construction the quagi is hard to beat. Howard KE6MAK |
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