If you double the length of the boom and get all the elements perfectly tuned, you'll get a barely noticeable 1/2 S-unit (3db) increase. Long before you notice the increase in gain, you see the effects of a tighter pattern. If you don't know the exact part of a state the person you're' talking to is in, have maps on the wall with compass bearings marked out from your location and know how to work a good rotor well, the larger antenna can be a setback for some.
Case in point, here in Connecticut magnetic north is about 14 degrees off from true north. Just about everyone calibrates their rotor box and beam with a compass. If you do that here, you're off 14 degrees and with an 8 element beam, that's a make or break situation in DX.
One last point. Rotors that flip your boom from vertical to horizontal are not a good option on smaller HF antennas. I wouldn't even try it on anything less than 5 or 6 elements. The driven element would be close enough to the supporting tower and mast to cause a large change in impedance as that element gets closer or further from the vertical tower or mast. Before you invest, just try loosening the boom bracket enough to roll it 90 degrees and see it the VSWR is still acceptable.
Case in point, here in Connecticut magnetic north is about 14 degrees off from true north. Just about everyone calibrates their rotor box and beam with a compass. If you do that here, you're off 14 degrees and with an 8 element beam, that's a make or break situation in DX.
One last point. Rotors that flip your boom from vertical to horizontal are not a good option on smaller HF antennas. I wouldn't even try it on anything less than 5 or 6 elements. The driven element would be close enough to the supporting tower and mast to cause a large change in impedance as that element gets closer or further from the vertical tower or mast. Before you invest, just try loosening the boom bracket enough to roll it 90 degrees and see it the VSWR is still acceptable.