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On 1 Dec 2005 23:38:42 -0800, "Brian Kelly" wrote:
wrote: On 1 Dec 2005 08:23:30 -0800, "Brian Kelly" wrote: . . . . I've seen suggestions here and there about simply aiming a beam vertically upward and doing all the tuning at ground level instead. Which would save an awful lot of time and effort. If it works. Does anybody around here have any experience with this method and if so how succesful was it? Thanks, Brian w3rv It will get you close. . . . Good. Beats having to taking the beam down and putting it back up several times just to get in the ballpark. I expect to have to do a couple of these final tweaking cycles after rough tuning at ground level. Would be a *big* help. However it really depends on the front to back of the antenna. Dipoles do poorly this way, 2 element beams slightly better. I've done 3 element 6m beams with the reflector only 4ft off the ground pointing up with excellent success. Seems the breakpoint is some where around better than 10or 12 DB F/B ratio. Per my response to W4ZCV hexagonal beams typically have 10-20 dB F/B ratios so they're in range of your "breakpoint". You do need distance from the ground or it acts like a reflector and messes with your measurments. Understood. Looks like you and W4ZCV are basically in agreement so I'll follow you two in this direction. Thanks! The yabut/gotcha is until the beam is acting like one you don't have the F/B ratio to rely on so it may take an iteration or two before you converge. Once you are in the fine tuning range it should work well pointing it up. This is a problem that most Yagis don't have as tuning is limited to tweeking the match for the driver and maybe the driven element length to make the match work right. So what regular yagis are tuned up pointing up they are really just having the match set up correctly(usually). Allison |
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