To: | towertalk@contesting.com |
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Subject: | Re: [TowerTalk] Inverted Vees |
From: | Grant Saviers <grants2@pacbell.net> |
Date: | Mon, 15 Jun 2020 11:09:50 -0700 |
List-post: | <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com> |
On my way to try to find more low angle 80m gain than my Tornado loaded
rotatable dipole at 100' (average EU arrival < 10deg from 47.5N WWA) I
explored (lot's of modeling) phased inverted V's hung off my 89' tower.
The tower was always messing up the pattern. Then I found that Greg
Ordy (W8WWV) had written about this approach on his website and
basically gave up on the idea after a very serious attempt.
So while a loaded vertical dipole is a useful antenna the tower interaction will likely be significant and modeling would be a very good idea. The yagi top loading needs included since it will make the resonance not 90ft. OTOH maybe you have the resonance (or can make it) needed for a reflector and spacing the VD out on a catenary will yield a useful pattern. I think that is described in ON4UN. For an omni VD (or adjusting resonance for a yagi) probably detuning the tower into lower interacting segments will be needed, see the W8JI website for how this works. It's a tough game to achieve low angles from horizontal antennas on 80m until over 1/2 wl high. Safety is a concern since the voltage at QRO at the bottom end of any VD can be awesome. Grant KZ1W On 6/15/2020 07:49, Robert Harmon wrote: Interesting discussion on inverted V's. I have probably a typical inverted V setup for 80M strung off of a tower. I have the center of the V strung off my tower at 90 feet and the ends slope down to 35 feet to two poles on each side of my property. Here's an idea I have been thinking about. Hanging a vertical dipole from the tower with loading coils in each leg to compensate for the shorter length. Better low angle radiation ? I know I would have reduced bandwidth but that would be ok, I hang out in the very low end of 80 anyway chasing CW DX. What do you think, improvement over the V ? Bob K6UJOn Jun 15, 2020, at 7:10 AM, jimlux <jimlux@earthlink.net> wrote: On 6/14/20 8:23 PM, Jim Brown wrote:On 6/14/2020 7:03 PM, wesattaway wrote:However, as overall height is raised then best performance occurs when the wires are level. I think Jim Briwn may have some data on this.Hi Wes, My study was on the effect of height on horizontal and vertical antennas, and I developed a figure of merit in dB for height of horizontal antennas. The executive summary is that for 30M and below, higher is better. :)<snip>3) Soil quality STRONGLY affects vertically polarized antennas -- the better the soil conductivity, the better they work. 4) HF verticals work better on the roof than on the ground.<snip> There's two separate factors at work in #3 a) a "near field" effect - for a monopole vertical, the ground (or radial field) is half the antenna. Hence the "120 radials" for FCC proof of performance exemption. Not so much effect for a vertical dipole. b) a "far field" effect - H-pol is reflected well almost at any incidence angle and with any soil properties. Not so with V-pol which is strongly affected by soil properties and incidence angle. The difference in these two effects (in broad strokes) is that (a) is a big deal close in (dimensions comparable to antenna height) and (b) is about the soil properties farther away. Consider a 50 foot tall monopole. You can think about the ray from the antenna hitting a spot at some distance and then reflecting. And each point on the antenna hits a different spot. For a low elevation angle, say, 10 degrees, the spot for the top of the antenna is 50/tan(elev) = 283 feet away. And it gets way farther out very rapidly. For 3 degree elevation, the "reflection spot" is 1000 ft away. Of course, for a spot on the antenna that is 25 ft high, the "spot" is half as far away. So for really low angle radiation (like 3 degrees), everything within 20 times the height of the antenna contributes. Hence the popularity of verticals at the beach, or in the middle of the proverbial salt marsh. As Jim points out in #4, raising the antenna is good (reduces losses from near field (a)) but does extend the far field issue. For a 50 foot elevated dipole at 100 ft the radiation at 3 degrees is reflecting from spots at 1500-2500 ft away. _______________________________________________ _______________________________________________ TowerTalk mailing list TowerTalk@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk_______________________________________________ _______________________________________________ TowerTalk mailing list TowerTalk@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk _______________________________________________ _______________________________________________ TowerTalk mailing list TowerTalk@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk |
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