the answer is... it depends on your definition of 'height'. now,
i don't mean to sound like a clinton answer, but here is the problem
and what i have seen after lots of modeling.
if the top of the loops are at the same height as the peak of the
inverted v elements the inverted v beam is better. if the loops are
around a boom such that the boom is at the same height as the top
of the loops (and therefor 1/2 of the loops is higher than the
inverted v elements) the loop beam will be better.
note, this is for top heights generally 1/2-3/4 wavelength or below
using real ground. and feeding the loops for horizontal polarization.
results may vary as you get the tops much higher as the bottom part
of the loops may start contributing more to the pattern. most of my
models were to determine if it was worth putting the bottom half of
the loop on an 80m inverted v beam with the tops of the loops, and the
tops of the v's at 150'.... it isn't. not only would i lose gain
(just fractions of a db), but it makes construction much harder as
it would require another rope, twice the wire to accumulate ice, and
fishing the bottom wire around guy wires and lower yagis.
--
David Robbins K1TTT (ex KY1H)
k1ttt@berkshire.net or robbins@berkshire.net
http://www.berkshire.net/~robbins/k1ttt.html
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