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Thanks, the ones was considering are the yagis with the elements bent
into loops, but, from what I see, wouldn't really make a differnece. note some of the 1296 antennas shaped like that, at any rate! But, again, when I think-- dangerous things tend to happen! Never have done it- tho WA7TDU lived about 4 blocks from me when in K.Falls, and K7XC, down here in Reno also has done it. Keep thinking of giveing it a try, but dont knowif ever will happen. Jim NN7K Wes Stewart wrote: On Tue, 05 Apr 2005 15:33:42 GMT, Jim - NN7K wrote: |Thanks, Wes-- when originally considered it was looking at the moon |in terms of approaching a point source (the surface of the moon |being relatively small TIME-WISE- but the surface to the edges |being relatvly HUGE in distance , per Wavelength would allow a |distortion of a reflection. As I said , its dangerous to get me |thinking too hard (I tend to fall asleep)! Tho, hadn't considered |the (Cheezy) effect! makes me wonder if linear circular would be |the way to go, or would it distort as bad as other signals |(do to Faraday Rotation- the skewing of the signal's polarization)? |Just curious. The linear circular refers to circular yagi construction |rather than as a Helix? Or is this tilting at windmills? Jim - NN7K Linear circular is an oxymoron. When you phase two crossed Yagis to generate circular polarization, it is just as "circular" as a helix. It's been 20 years (how time flies) since I was operating EME but I remain interested. There is a current school of thought that switchable polarization has an operational advantage. I remain unconvinced when the complexity and degradation of performance is factored in. I don't know of anyone who is using true circular polarization (at VHF) even though their antennas are capable of generating it. The reason to have switching capability is speed up the QSO. With fixed linear polarization, at any given time, there can be spatial and Faraday rotation caused polarization mismatch between two stations located on different parts of the Earth. Switching polarization at one end can overcome all or part of this mismatch. Usually, if one waits long enough the always changing Faraday rotation will bring the mismatch to zero or near zero without any switching. So there is a trade of complexity for speed. In the modeling I've done, I have yet to see a case of high gain, crossed-element Yagis that were not degraded by the presence of the stacking hardware. |
#12
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On Wed, 06 Apr 2005 01:35:34 GMT, Jim - NN7K
wrote: Thanks, the ones was considering are the yagis with the elements bent into loops, but, from what I see, wouldn't really make a differnece. note some of the 1296 antennas shaped like that, at any rate! Hold on. Those are "Loop Yagis." They are not circularly polarized any more than a quad is. When an approximate one-wavelength loop is fed at the bottom, it has linear horizontal polarization. Period. But, again, when I think-- dangerous things tend to happen! Never have done it- tho WA7TDU lived about 4 blocks from me when in K.Falls, and K7XC, down here in Reno also has done it. Keep thinking of giveing it a try, but dont knowif ever will happen. Jim NN7K I don't have all of my old logs computerized but I seem to remember working 'TDU. I have K7XC in the log on two-meters. My ragchewing tropo range was about 400 miles and my best DX was 10,000 miles [g]. ZS6ALE who completed my 2-M WAC. |
#13
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"Wes Stewart" bravely wrote to "All" (05 Apr 05 01:40:13)
--- on the heady topic of " Gain of Isotropic (continued)" WS From: Wes Stewart *n7ws*@ yahoo.com WS Xref: aeinews rec.radio.amateur.antenna:27950 WS the lunar surface isn't a flat metallic surface but is instead, WS as everyone knows, a lumpy green cheese ball. No, it's chocolate turtles all the way! A*s*i*m*o*v .... I came, I saw, I got sidetracked, I forgot why I was here. |
#14
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"Wes Stewart" wrote:
I don't know of anyone who is using true circular polarization (at VHF) even though their antennas are capable of generating it. ________________ Most FM broadcast stations in the US use some form of dual polarization, which they think of as "circular" but usually is not due to differing H&V pattern distortions from the mounting structure supporting their antennas. Paper 6 at http://rfry.org discusses this in the form of NEC-2 studies. In some cases, several FM stations all use a common antenna at a master FM site. An array of "cavity-backed radiators"* used in these cases can provide a c-pol axial ratio of 2dB or less for all polarization planes. Antennas of this design are used as master FM antennas in Houston, Dallas and St Louis, where they radiate approximately eight FM stations of 100kW ERP each. Sears Tower in Chicago has a number of them installed in a vertical stack for use by individual FM stations. *crossed, wideband dipoles in phase quadrature, installed in a circular, wire mesh cavity about 1/4-wave deep and less than a wavelength in diameter and arrayed in groups of three or four around a triangular or square cross-section tower. Several levels (often 8 or 10) are used to provide elevation gain for the array. RF |
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