" Is this the takeoff angle you were talking about?"
Some info that might help.
Antenna take off angle is how the signal leaves the antenna.
Generally you want a low take off angle to keep the signal down on the horizon to allow the signal to travel further when working DX
Antenna modeling programs can show what the take off angle of antennas are.
The above modeling image is a 4 element Yagi antenna.
The lobe marked "B" is the dominant lobe and is down close to the horizon, that is good for long haul DX.
Generally for dx work you want low take off angles.
There are also other things that come into play, like " nulls" that can effect how your signal leaves the antenna.
There are cases were a high take off angle " can " be good if you are trying to get a signal up to a elevation above your station.
I suggest doing some research on antenna take off angles to help you to understand how this works.
There is lots of info on the web, it can get complicated with height above ground, frequency being used and more.
It takes some study to understand
73
Jeff