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![]() chris wrote: Why (or how) does the longer element "reflect" the radio wave, A reflector does not reflect anything. It reradiates. When a element is self-resonant it reradiates with 180 degree phase inversion. Spacing from the driven element causes a phase delay. Lets say that spacing is 90 degrees. The phase to the rear direction would be -90+180=+90 degrees. Two elements like this, when phased and in-line, fire in the direction of lagging current. So the antenna fires towards the driven element. and the shorter element "direct" the radio wave. The shorter element doesn't direct. It reradiates energy. When we shorten an element and excite it with an external field, the current is advanced some amount in phase besides having the 180 inversion caused by reradiating an external field. Let's say we shorten it enough that the phase advances 120 degrees from the shortening, and we have 45 degree spacing. Now we have -45 (spacing delay) plus 180 flip (reradiation) = +135 degrees. To that we add another +120 because the element is short and capacitive. That's +255 degrees. +255 is the same as -105 degrees, and again since the elements fire in the direction of lagging currents the driven element's energy is reenforced in the direction of the short element. Sorry you asked? Well, that's how it works. Also, on many multi-element Yagi designs, the norm seems to be just one reflector, and many director elements. Does this mean that the reflector is more "effective" than the directors at modifying the radiation field? No. Once something removes energy form the rear, there is no more energy to excite and further elements. You can't excite additional reflectors because there is no energy there to excite them, and so they become useless hunks of metal without much current. Why are there no designs with just one director, and multiple reflectors? Because it doesn't do anything when you put an element in an area where there is no field to excite it. Why does the shorter element apparently affect the field more than the longer elements? They don't. They just happen to be where energy has been concentrated, and as long as they are being excited they can help shape the pattern. 73 Tom |
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