To: | topband@contesting.com |
---|---|
Subject: | Topband: S9SS On 160 |
From: | Bill Tippett <btippett@alum.mit.edu> |
Date: | Mon, 15 Mar 2004 09:02:15 -0500 |
List-post: | <mailto:topband@contesting.com> |
W8JI wrote: >VK3ZL does V vs. H tests comparing a dipole at 110 feet to a ~45 foot vertical, and any given day either could be stronger. As a general rule, his dipole has the highest chance of being stronger only at high solar disturbances or very near his sunset. Most of the time the vertical is better. As a matter of fact, he almost never finds the H better except when propagation is disturbed or at a "sun exposure". >I found the same thing here. At or near my sunrise "peak" my horizontal antennas all evened out more with verticals. At the same time, the signal is obviously scattering or multi-pathing because the Beverage and vertical arrays lose directivity. I suspect differences have much more to do with takeoff angles (TOA) than polarization. I put up an inverted-V on my 100' tower in January to maximize high angles and Eznec shows ~100' is about the optimum (to maximize gain at a 90 degree TOA). The breakeven angle for equal gain with my vertical array is at ~40 degrees TOA. Although the vertical is better for DX >95% of the time, there are times when the inverted-V is clearly superior. Normally these seem to be near sunrise and sunset, but not always. Furthermore there is no consistency from one day to the next even at sunrise/sunset. I've seen days when the inverted-V will be VERY superior (>10 dB) to the 3-element vertical array but the next day it will be the opposite. The other strange thing I've noticed is that differences are not always reciprocal for transmit and receive. For example, last night the inverted-V sounded nearly as strong as the vertical array on receive, but transmit tests indicated the vertical was stronger in EU by several S-units. BTW, XF4IH was a true 599 yesterday at my sunrise on the inverted-V (vertical array is presently fixed NE so I can't say what he would have been if oriented SW). I also worked 9V1GO with the inverted-V after sunrise last week long after Bob had faded out on my NNW Beverage (which is low angle). I guess this simply proves the old adage "You can't have too many antennas"! 73, Bill W4ZV P.S. Here is a plot comparing TOA's between the inverted-V and vertical array: http://users.vnet.net/btippett/new_page_10.htm _______________________________________________ Topband mailing list Topband@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/topband |
<Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread> |
---|---|---|
|
Previous by Date: | Topband: re: JY9QJ, Roger Parsons |
---|---|
Next by Date: | Topband: re: Question re 5Z4, Roger Parsons |
Previous by Thread: | Re: Topband: S9SS On 160, Tom Rauch |
Next by Thread: | Topband: HK0GU/1, Dennis Ashworth |
Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |