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![]() "Gary Schafer" wrote in message ... You want both antennas if you can do it. Anyone who declares one or the other the winner is simply wrong. - 73 de Mike KB3EIA - I did some tests a couple of years ago on 10 meters between vertical and horizontal on an 1800 mile path. It seems that there is quite a bit of rotation in polarity of the signal from minute to minute. I tried right and left hand circular to confirm that it was rotation. 73 Gary K4FMX Cross-polarization losses are in the neighborhood of 10-20 dB at VHF and above. With my license, I cannot do HF, so others may chime in with those numbers. Assuming ... there's that word ... that the random polarization variations ("rotations") are around some central figure, during for a given QSO, then one antenna will work better -- the one that happens to be optimum for that path and for the antenna on the other end of the QSO. There exists a phenomenon that I do not understand well, called Faraday rotation, where an EM wave passing through a magnetic field will undergo a polarization "alteration", so to speak. Thus, two verticals on the ends of a long-distance QSO might not perform as well as if one were a vertical and the other a horizontal -- due to the Earth's magnetic field. John KD6VKW |
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