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#1
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Hi, i am going in a VHF/UHF contest this weekend and have a question about
stacking beams. We will have a pole approx 15-20ft long and want to stack the following antennas, 1x20 element UHF yagi 1x10 element 2 Metre Yagi 1x5 element 6 Metre Yagi. UHF yagi is approx 6-8ft long VHF is approx 6ft long 6M is approx 17ft long They are all horisontally mounted. I am guessing it will be UHF at top, then 2 mtr then 6 mtr. What i would like to know is if this pole is long enough to space them vertically enough or not. If so, what distance should they be? Thanks Gary VK3LCD |
#2
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On Wed, 12 Nov 2008 18:15:37 +1100, Gary Smith wrote:
Hi, i am going in a VHF/UHF contest this weekend and have a question about stacking beams. We will have a pole approx 15-20ft long and want to stack the following antennas, 1x20 element UHF yagi 1x10 element 2 Metre Yagi 1x5 element 6 Metre Yagi. UHF yagi is approx 6-8ft long VHF is approx 6ft long 6M is approx 17ft long They are all horisontally mounted. I am guessing it will be UHF at top, then 2 mtr then 6 mtr. What i would like to know is if this pole is long enough to space them vertically enough or not. If so, what distance should they be? Thanks Gary VK3LCD It should work. Try to get at least a 1/4 wavelength between them (a half wavelength would be better. If you can get the 50 MHz 3 meters off the ground and the 70 CM on top, and split the difference with the 2 meters, it should be a good place to start. Do you have a VSWR meter e.g. MFJ-956? |
#3
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![]() "Gary Smith" wrote in message ... Hi, i am going in a VHF/UHF contest this weekend and have a question about stacking beams. We will have a pole approx 15-20ft long and want to stack the following antennas, 1x20 element UHF yagi 1x10 element 2 Metre Yagi 1x5 element 6 Metre Yagi. UHF yagi is approx 6-8ft long VHF is approx 6ft long 6M is approx 17ft long They are all horisontally mounted. I am guessing it will be UHF at top, then 2 mtr then 6 mtr. What i would like to know is if this pole is long enough to space them vertically enough or not. If so, what distance should they be? Thanks Gary VK3LCD There seems to be too many elements on the VHF and UHF antennas. I wold think the booms should be twice as long. I did not have too much choice when I mounted my antennas on the tower. I had about 15 feet of pipe out of the top of the tower. I put a M2 432 antenna at the top, went down 4 feet and put a M2 2 meter beam, both had about a 14 foot long boom. Then 5 feet below that is a 5 element 6 meter beam on an 18 foot boom and then the triband beam for the low bands. I am sure they interact to some extent, but they do seem to work ok and not much interaction of the swr when mounted on the tower. All beams are horizontal. |
#4
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Gary,
For VHF contests I usually put the lowest frequency beam on top. After doing some modeling with 4NEC2, the higher you get in terms of wavelengths, the lower your takeoff angle on the radiation. I also did some modeling to look at the interaction between yagis in a stack. For your set-up, it looks like the 6M yagi should be at the top, the 432 in the middle and the 2M at the bottom. 73, N6FD Erich Usually QRP Portable in DM15 50, 144, 222, 432, 902, and 1296 MHz Gary Smith wrote: Hi, i am going in a VHF/UHF contest this weekend and have a question about stacking beams. We will have a pole approx 15-20ft long and want to stack the following antennas, 1x20 element UHF yagi 1x10 element 2 Metre Yagi 1x5 element 6 Metre Yagi. UHF yagi is approx 6-8ft long VHF is approx 6ft long 6M is approx 17ft long They are all horisontally mounted. I am guessing it will be UHF at top, then 2 mtr then 6 mtr. What i would like to know is if this pole is long enough to space them vertically enough or not. If so, what distance should they be? Thanks Gary VK3LCD |
#5
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Gary,
The 'best' separation distance is as much as you can get. After that, it's more a practical thing, use what you got, do what you can. Will that result in the 'best'/'perfect' situation? Of course not, but it will work in the majority of cases. A very rough ROT (Rule Of Thumb) is that UHF antennas require less separation than VHF antennas, which require less separation than HF antennas. - 'Doc Absolute best distance between antennas is at least 1 mile... in all directions. I'm still working on mine. |
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