Here is my question before it goes in the air.
The picture assembly say the elements should be as follows.
REFLECTOR = 109 INCHES
SPACING FROM REFLECTOR TO DRIVEN = 3 FOOT 8 INCHES
DRIVER = 105 INCHES
SPACING FROM DRIVER TO FIRST DIRECTOR = 5 FOOT 2 INCHES
DIRECTOR 1 = 100 INCHES
SPACING FROM FIRST DIRECTOR TO THE SECOND DIRECTOR = 3 FOOT 8 INCHES
DIRECTOR 2 = 100 INCHES
All elements attach to the hubs are 1/2 O.D. diameter and reduce to a smaller 3/8 O.D. of the element.
The Boom is 12 foot long
Does this seem correct?
Can someone double check this on Eznec?
It just seems the front director should be a tad shorter than the first???
I am just basing this off assembling a Moonraker and a Shooting Star.
Help me out before I put this in the air
Hammer, beams are hard to figure sometimes.
The
basic trends in beam construction and the spacing between the Dr/D1 is usualy the narrowest space along the boom of a 4 element. In your case it is the widest, and I sure don't get that.
I think taking Moleculo's advise to question the numbers you see is a valid question, and I based that on my thoughts above. Another thing is when you add up the spaces you give us, it makes the boom longer than the length of 12' you show. It's not much, but why is that?
This Giz has a very short boom for a 4 element, and the generally the length of the boom is what determines gain performance, more-so than the number of elements. That said, and including the apparent issues with spacing you raise, I hear it said all the time---how well these Gizmotchy antennas work. So, this Giz seems like a contradiction to me. I could be wrong however, so I won't argue what these guys say, but I really wonder how they know.
Will any of this make a difference in the way beams work? I can't prove anything, but I see differences in performance with my beams, working as they should to working almost like an omni-directional. But, I can't argue with all the folks that claim the Giz works great.
The wide spacing you show between Dr/D1 will certainly help to make the match look better and is easier to achieve. It may also allow a wider bandwidth, but IMO this will all come with a heavy cost to gain and rejection, 62" is very wide for such a short boom. The Moonrakers and Shooting Star's are generally 44" - 54" not 62" like you indicate.
Again, take Moleculo's advise and re-consider the measurements.