That doesn't make sense.... there are many who would attest that the Imax 2000 is just as good as the maco 5/8 or just barely down, at distances of 20-50 miles away. If the elevation angle of the radiation is so much higher on the Imax, shouldn't the imax not have anywhere near the local/regional range as the maco 5/8?
Perhaps if you removed or significantly shortened the radials on the SP-500 these things would make more sense after your observation. My comments were based on a 5/8 wave ground plane antenna and not an end fed fiberglass stick.
The Imax is not a 5/8 wave ground plane and because of this its matching network is designed to take the higher impedance that results without radials and transform it back down to 50 ohms. Its counterpoise is your coax and mast. This usually causes much more RFI problems then a ground plane.
This is why adding the radials does little to improve the gain on the horizon with an Imax. Although, you will gain a little decoupling from adding the ground plane kit and improve the RFI problem. You will also note the kit uses radials that are very short and on a sharp downward angle. They do that so it reduces the affect on impedance since the antenna is already designed to work without them.