Supergonzo...I think you need to do a little more studying (start with the ARRL Antenna book) on how a coil in an antenna works. Actually the way a coil works in any circuit, for that matter. When a coil is present in a circuit, the current does not pass through the coil winding around the turns of the coil. It passes straight through the coil and creates a field.
The radiation pattern of an antenna does not change to horizontal when the current reaches the coil. A coil causes inductive reactance, meaning it stores energy, and induces a voltage on the circuit that follows. Normally with a 1/4 wave vertical antenna, the current is at maximum at the bottom of the antenna, then tapers off to the tip. Picture the current being similar to the hypotenuse of a right triangle. With a load coil in the middle of the antenna, the inductive reactance causes the current to stay almost constant with no taper until it reaches the end of the coil, then it tapers off. This actually can help the performance if the antenna is designed properly.
The reason competition style antennas use big, wide open coils is because you need wide spacing on the coils to handle the power that will be applied. However, the real wide spacing doesn't have much inductance. To compensate, the coils are made wider (bigger) which increases inductance.
BTW, the comments made about the Beta matching system in the Interceptor also require further study. The beta match also adds inductive reactance to the circuit, and it does not change the radiated pattern to a horizontal polarization. I'm familiar with how programs such as EZNec model the Interceptor, but remember...those are mathematical models only and must be taken only as a starting point for analytical purposes. To truly understand what is occurring in any antenna, you have get out field test it.
Moleculo
The radiation pattern of an antenna does not change to horizontal when the current reaches the coil. A coil causes inductive reactance, meaning it stores energy, and induces a voltage on the circuit that follows. Normally with a 1/4 wave vertical antenna, the current is at maximum at the bottom of the antenna, then tapers off to the tip. Picture the current being similar to the hypotenuse of a right triangle. With a load coil in the middle of the antenna, the inductive reactance causes the current to stay almost constant with no taper until it reaches the end of the coil, then it tapers off. This actually can help the performance if the antenna is designed properly.
The reason competition style antennas use big, wide open coils is because you need wide spacing on the coils to handle the power that will be applied. However, the real wide spacing doesn't have much inductance. To compensate, the coils are made wider (bigger) which increases inductance.
BTW, the comments made about the Beta matching system in the Interceptor also require further study. The beta match also adds inductive reactance to the circuit, and it does not change the radiated pattern to a horizontal polarization. I'm familiar with how programs such as EZNec model the Interceptor, but remember...those are mathematical models only and must be taken only as a starting point for analytical purposes. To truly understand what is occurring in any antenna, you have get out field test it.
Moleculo