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Bob, K6RTM wrote:
"Discones are covered in section 8.37 and log periodics are covered in section 8.21." In my 3rd edition of the RSGB VHF/UHF Manual, the discone is on page 7.28 and the log periodic is on page 7.35. Bob also wrote: "The take-off angle increases with the frequency." In my experience, the vertical angle of maximum radiation, in general, decreases with antenna height above the earth, when the height of the antenna in is not over 5/8 wavelength. Increasing the frequency used with an antenna of fixed height is equivalent to increasing the height of an antenna using a fixed frequency because it is a function of antenna height above the reflecting surface in terms of wavelength. It is all a matter of scale. At double the frequency, an antenna only needs half the physical height to be the same elevation above ground to have the same elevation in terms of wavelength. Soil conductivity and depth of penetration in the earth are being ignored in the comparison for simplicity. It`s no big deal. A 1/2-wave horizontal dipole erected 1/4-wave over good earth has its maximum radiation toward the zenith. The same antenna elevated to 1/2-wave above the earth has a take-off angle near 30 degrees above the horizon. When antenna height exceeds 5/8 wavelength, added lobes appear in the vertical radiation pattern. The additional lobes appear in the vertical radiation patterns of vertical antennas too when their heights exceed 5/8-wavelength. It is for this reason that AM broadcast stations usually limit their towers to no more than 5/8-wavelength. Sky wave propagation could produce substantial interference with the ground wave signal at relatively short distances at night from the high-angle radiation. In a sense Bob is correct in that some of the take-off angle increases with frequency, in that it produces growth of additional lobes in the take-off pattern. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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