Seasons Greetings, questions & shameless plug

force12@interserv.com force12@interserv.com
Fri, 27 Dec 1996 17:15:14 -0800


Hi, Bob. Like Steve's response, this will sound like a blatant, commercial plug; 
however, it is not intended to be so. My first "serious" antennas were all 
quads, some commrcial, some homebrew. They ranged from 2 elements to 5; from 
single band to two-band, to triband. I thought they "worked well", until a 
friend brought over a 20 mtr Yagi to use as a third antennna in a contest. After 
the contest, I convinced him to let it remain at the QTH for a while. I have 
never used another quad.
	Wayne Overbeck, N6NB (the inventor of the Quagi) did a very good 
comparison between quads and yagis using his personally developed 2 element 
quad. This was back in maybe the late 70's. Interesting reading.
	My personal preference is the Yagi. It is not 3 dimensional, which means 
it is much easier to install. It is essentially a flat plane, which means it 
looks smaller. The Yagi is straight forward in design and tuning, vs. quad 
tuning which Steve mentioned. My experience in having quads and Yagis 
simultaneously and also in competitive situations is overwhelmingly in favor of 
the Yagi - regardless of height above ground, or boom length comparisons.
	There are efficient, multiband Yagis around that will be just fine on 
your tower. One from Force 12 is the C-4, which covers 40-10 on an 18' boom. 
There are many more!
	73,
	    Tom, N6BT (Force 12 Antennas ad Systems)//


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