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tomerbr wrote:
this was a qustion from my instractor in college Ignore the arguing going on here and suffice it to say that you could get a PhD in antenna theory and spend a lifetime experimenting and just begin to have a clear understanding of antennas. That may be exaggerated, but only slightly. A few general things to keep in mind. Many cell phones work on two different bands, the antenna needs to work on both. When you are interested in signals in a certain direction, in this case out and not up, the longer the antenna the more gain and the more directional it will be. Don't mistake that as an indication that you just want as long as a wire as you can get, it is much more complex than that. For an omni directional antenna where you want to limit the signal to out and not up, stacking several antennas and hooking them all together in some fashion, is one way to do that, but I doubt that any of the little cell phone antennas do that. About the only time you would want an antenna that also send the signal up is if you are communicating with low earth orbit satellites that could be anywhere form the horizon to straight above you. In that case, the antennas start looking more interesting, that a vertical element. -- Chris W KE5GIX Gift Giving Made Easy Get the gifts you want & give the gifts they want One stop wish list for any gift, from anywhere, for any occasion! http://thewishzone.com |
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