The advantage of stacking is the different take off angles. Put one at 1/2 wavelength high and one at 1 wavelength high. The lower one will have far more gain than the higher one for short distance and can be up to 15dB better. Long distance you switch to the one at 1 wavelength high.
The advantage of stacking is the different take off angles. Put one at 1/2 wavelength high and one at 1 wavelength high. The lower one will have far more gain than the higher one for short distance and can be up to 15dB better. Long distance you switch to the one at 1 wavelength high.
You can cram too many elements on a boom and hurt gain.....
IMO , one you go past 3 or 4 elements , if you want more gain going higher is a better investment than a longer boom/more elements .
A little confusion slipped in about the stacking. There are guys that do stack one over the other but those are just single polarity antennas stacked horizontally over each other. Not dual polarized antennas. You see a lot of guys that do contesting doing it on the amature bands. There's a guy out of Italy I'm sure I'm spelling his name wrong Giancarlo that comes booming into the states on 38 LSB or ch.6 Am that runs stacked one over the other 5 element beam antennas.I have seen large antennas such as the Moonraker 4 stacked side by side but can't recall ever seeing one over the other. Certainly not with a 1/2 wavelength distance between them.
I thought the purpose of stacking such antennas was to get additional gain; not to have a choice in takeoff angles between the two.
I believe something has been lost in translation here.