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Re: [CQ-Contest] Stacking on separate towers, take off angles?

To: Jukka Klemola <jpklemola@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Stacking on separate towers, take off angles?
From: Pete Smith N4ZR <n4zr@contesting.com>
Date: Thu, 14 Mar 2013 08:49:35 -0400
List-post: <cq-contest@contesting.com">mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
I think that someone did some work maybe 10 years ago on the theory (and practice) of feeding two antennas on different towers. IIRC, the process mainly involved experimenting with different phasing for different directions, using one of those phasing boxes designed for phasing two verticals to produce a wide variety of patterns.

Jukka's solution sounds like it worked out very well for him, but I think that he was pretty lucky. More years ago than I'll admit to, I had a college astronomy course where I had to manually calculate the broadside pattern of a 22 MHz interferometer that used two dissimilar yagis pointed perpendicular to a 1500-foot baseline. Much trig later, I had a pattern of many very narrow beams with deep nulls in between. My point is that in terms of the phase of signals being emitted from two antennas on 20 meters, 65 feet is pretty near a full wavelength, and depending on the angle of that baseline to the desired direction, the signals will arrive at the target with very different phases, some reinforcing and some cancelling.

A final comment - in Europe I can see front-to-back and front to side being of major importance - I'm not sure that's quite so important in VE9. I'd much rather have the broader vertical pattern and pattern options that a conventional stack affords, but you gotta run what you have. And Mike, you might want to check the archives of the Towertalk reflector, an excellent source for smart practical antenna advice.

73, Pete N4ZR
Check out the Reverse Beacon Network at
http://reversebeacon.net,
blog at reversebeacon.blogspot.com.
For spots, please go to your favorite
ARC V6 or VE7CC DX cluster node.

On 3/14/2013 3:37 AM, Jukka Klemola wrote:
Hi Mike,
No problem.

Just connect them and if they work as separate antennas, they pretty
often work stacked, too.

I have two towers, separation about 65ft.
They are broadside to North America. Looking from here, the exact
direction is east coast, to be precise.

But, to be precise is not often needed.

On 40, the antennas work OK together, but I see no benefit as the
other is a FS stack and other is to me a pretty low (75ft or so) LL 2
element.

On 20 they work Great together. Some measurement results show real
gain to whole U.S. despite West Coast (looking from here is on the
_Right_) about 25-30 degrees off. The 3+3 = 6 yagis work OK to the
West Coast as well,
I just rotate the towers there, a little to the right.

To Japan the towers are in-line; about two waves separation.
I have not been measuring that so accurately but from what I have
experimented I can say the QRM level is reduced, so the yagis - when
connected together and beaming to JA short path function better than
the front stack alone.

Antennas being to other directions that are more odd . .
Just experiment with the relays.
The receiving conditions change from QSO to QSO.
Be prepared to experience that it is almost only about QRM management.

The antennas you are building will do Great.


The flaw I did with my system, was I had the stacks connected together
all the time in the beginning. I built a power divider so I can feed
the two tower together or just one of them. It gave extra capability
to the station.


Have Fun experimenting.
It is wonderful to learn there are people building stations that will
push through even in a little worse conditions.

About my system, you can see some pictures on
www.oh4a.fi
www.qsl.net/oh4a (this has not been updated for a long time)


73,
Jukka OH6LI



2013/3/14 Mike <ve9aa@nbnet.nb.ca>:
Hello from  New Brunswick, Canada de VE9AA, Mike



If anyone runs ‘stacked’ antennas on separate towers, I’d like to hear what
has been your experience  .



I have 2 (self-supporting) tower bases, aprox 65-70’ apart. (never measured
it—I put them in mni yrs ago)



They run on a line about N-S (EU is NE from here and USA is SW); same as
from W1.



The North tower will have a CC A3S at the ~74’ level and the South tower
will have another A3S

@ aprox the ~42’ level.  I can tweak those heights a little bit if need be.
I’ll have other antennas in the vicinity.



I have good ideas about “stacking” them either with a Array Solutions WX0B
Stackmatch II I already own, or something else I conjure up

here allowing me U/L/BIP…even flip one 180º out of phase for BOP, I think
coax phasing lines for a tribander might be a mess when attempting BOP, so I
may do a relay at one yagis feedpoint  if I go that route…. BUT...that’s not
the problem. (or the question)



My idea is to usually spray in 2 directions at a time when contesting,
however certain contests require I beam only in 1 direction.

WAG ( I beam Germany) .ARRL SS, 95% of the time, I beam SW or WSW….you get
the idea.\



I am relatively certain I can make a good guess of what the pattern will be
like when I beam due east or due west with both antennas.

(again, towers are N-S from one another)



The issue is when I put both antennas on EU or USA (NE or SW).  I am
envisioning the elevation pattern will be messed up (as in out of phase and
thus HIGH,…..good for E-skip or noon hour prop on 20m…. or else
unpredictable(?) as the wavefronts are both arriving at different times to
each antenna, thus they’ll be out of phase once you get anywhere away from
straight East or West (guessing a little here).



Is there anything that can be done to counteract that, or even guess as to
what it may be, or is it a total cr@pshoot?



I’ve searched and searched and searched on the web and on contesting.com and
found mere snippets here and there where someone mentioned stacking antennas
on separate towers, but never if it was better when BOTH antenna were aimed
the same way. (I guess most times in a contest it’s nice to cover 2
directions) I just see where there is a need for general DXing for P5RS7,
BS7H, KP1 or VU7 when you need to eek out every 10th of a dB or like I
mentioned before, in contests where I am lucky enough to be in the far North
East to just leavem’ parked NE or SW where I don’t know what I’ll be faced
with.



If anyone runs ‘stacked’ antennas on separate towers, I’d like to hear what
has been your experience  - J



Comments? (even anecdotal is fine…I am not a scientist or engineer, just a
technologist)



73, TNX !

Dit dit, Mike VE9AA

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