| Your are absolutely correct.  I didn't try to include that in my quick 
model because I was only trying to show that parasitic coupling can 
affect what Rick observed for the three antennas fed separately.  I 
didn't know what feedline lengths he used or if the unused ones were 
shorted or left open.  I do take the feedlines into account when I model 
stuff for myself, and as you say they have a very big effect.   I didn't 
even know if Rick's Inverted-V's were resonant or not ... I assumed they 
were but the results would be significantly different if they weren't.  
To top it off, I assumed that the three Inverted-V's had the same apex 
angle.  There would be more even coupling between the three antennas if 
instead the ends were all tied off at common points.  I guess it's no 
wonder everyone has different experiences and different impressions of 
what works and what doesn't on the subject of antennas, with so many 
influences on real life results.
 
 
 73,
Dave  AB7E 
 
 
 
 K4SAV wrote:
 You overlooked one other complicating factor, feedline length. The 
length of the feedline on the unused antenna determines if the unused 
antenna looks resonant or not.
 Considering only two of the antennas for the moment, if the upper 
antenna is unused and has a multiple of a half wavelength of feedline 
attached and the source end open, the lower antenna would look much 
the same as any other inverted vee at the same height.  If the top 
feedline happened to be an odd multiple of 1/4 wavelength and the 
source end open, nearly all the radiation from the lower antenna goes 
straight up. Other feedline lengths cause all sorts of radiation 
pattern changes, and everything reverses if the unused end is shorted 
instead of open.
 
 Experimental A/B testing of closely mounted antennas with uncontrolled 
parameters of feedline length and source impedance can produce some 
really weird results.
 
 On the other hand, using controlled feedline lengths and switching 
source impedance can produce different patterns which may be useful.  
More useful patterns can be obtained by feeding two or more antennas. 
You can get some gain, or for the ultimate NVIS antenna (if you really 
want that) try feeding two of the antennas 180 degrees out of phase.
 
 Jerry, K4SAV
 
 David Gilbert wrote:
 
 
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------Hi, Rick.
 
 Those are interesting comments, so I modeled it up with EZNEC with 
approximately resonant antennas to see what it looked like.  Your 
message says "inverted vee's" (plural), so I'm making the leap to 
assume you had all three inverted vee's up at the same time and were 
able to switch between them.  Please correct me if I'm wrong ... and 
if I am wrong you and everyone else will probably want to ignore that 
which follows.
 
 Here's what EZNEC says about inverted vee's individually at the 
various heights:
 
 30 ft ...   max lobe straight up (90 degrees) of 6.4 dbi --- gain at 
20 degrees (arbitrary mid angle) of 0.2 dbi
 60 ft ...   max lobe at 35 degrees of 5.8 dbi --- gain at 20 degrees 
of 4.0 dbi
 90 ft ...   max lobe at 23 degrees of 8.3 dbi --- gain at 20 degrees 
of 8.2 dbi
 
 It gets more interesting when you look at the three antennas all 
together on the same tower, but only one being fed.
 
 30 ft antenna fed ...   max lobe at 90 degrees of 7.6 dbi --- gain at 
20 degrees of 2.7 dbi
 60 ft antenna fed ...   max lobe at 26 degrees of 5.5 dbi --- gain at 
20 degrees of 5.1 dbi
 90 ft antenna fed ...   max lobe at 26 degrees of 6.4 dbi --- gain at 
20 degrees of 6.4 dbi
 
 None of this data should be taken too literally, of course, but the 
model implies a lot of parasitic coupling between the three antennas 
that affects the pattern even when only one of the antennas is being 
fed.  Individually, the signal level at 20 degrees varies by 8 db 
depending upon whether the antenna is at 30 feet or 90 feet.  
Collectively, the signal level of the stack of three antennas varies 
by less than half that (3.7 db in this arbitrary case) no matter 
which of the antennas is fed.  In real life the difference across the 
stack might be even less.  If I had my choice, I'd prefer to have 
only the upper antenna on the tower ... unless of course, as you say, 
someone wanted to optimize the close-in performance.  For longer DX, 
takeoff angles as low as 10 degrees are useful and there the 
difference according to the model jumps to 10 db.
 
 It would be interesting to see someone hang an inverted vee from a 
pully and rope and take signal strength readings at different 
heights.  I don't have my tower up yet at this new QTH, but if nobody 
has done so by the time I get the tower up I'll promise to give it a 
try.
 
 
 73,
Dave  AB7E 
 
 
 
 
 Richard (Rick) Karlquist wrote:
 
 
 Anecdotal results from anywhere are irrelevant ... that was my 
point.  Idon't trust software analyses implicitly, but I trust them more than
 opinions that aren't backed by direct comparison of some sort (like 
an A
 vs B test of two antennas at the same height at the same time).
 
 Yup ... well, close anyway.  I used a fixed 2 element 40m wire yagi at
 70 feet for a while.  It worked great and I had a lot of fun with it.
 It would have worked even better at 90 feet, and it would have 
worked a
 whole lot worse at 45 feet like the original message from NY6DX 
discussed.
 
 Dave  AB7E
 
 
 Interesting that you should mention A/B'ing.  I did a lot of A/B'ing 
of 40
 meter
 inverted vee's at 30, 60, and 90 ft.  I thought the 90 ft one would 
have a
 substantial
 advantage over the lower ones, but in actual operation they were 
very hard
 to tell apart.  I listened to foreign broadcast stations and ham DX 
stations
 as
 much as I could and looked for S-meter changes.  On local stations 
(<100
 miles),
 there was a substantial difference which agreed with conventional 
wisdom of
 the lower the better for locals.  YMMV.
 
 Rick N6RK
 
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