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Topband: Hillside Beverage Antenna

To: topband@contesting.com
Subject: Topband: Hillside Beverage Antenna
From: Bill Tippett <btippett@alum.mit.edu>
Date: Sat, 15 May 2004 07:37:28 -0400
List-post: <mailto:topband@contesting.com>
>I'd like to know whether a beverage antenna running up a steep
slope would have better or worse performance compared to one on
flat ground.  The slope in question is fairly consistent at about
40 degrees

        Probably worse if you want low angles.  I recall a
~1 wl Beverage has a takeoff of ~35 degrees over flat ground,
so yours may be more like 75 degrees.  Remember that the
ground underneath the wire is also part of the Beverage antenna.
Conversely, if you run a Beverage sloping down in the desired
direction, it should lower your takeoff angle.  If you have
a 40 degree slope toward Europe, you will also probably have
some blockage at low angles on your TX antenna.  However, it's
always worth trying rather than speculating about theory.  If
a vertical/Beverage combination doesn't work, an inverted-Vee
might work better for both TX and RX.  Of course having all
of the above is best! ;-)

        From Arizona you may find your best azimuth for Europe
may be around 70 degrees instead of direct at 40 degrees.  I
found that was true from my QTH north of Denver over the 9 years
I operated on Topband from there.  This is due to the signals
being skewed by the geomagnetic field which affects paths in that
direction (Magnetic North from Colorado was about 13 degrees and
I suspect it is similar for Arizona).  Hopefully a Beverage at 70
degrees bearing might be at a gentler slope.  I know K0RF has
good luck with Beverages running sideways on the side of the
plateau he is on.

73, Bill W4ZV
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