Hello Mr suburban!
Aways intresting to disagree!.
Here's my thought..:
Quote Of Mr suburban:
I dont understand why this is so difficult to figure out you mount the feed point of the antennas at same base height that is the way you make a comparison of 2 antennas. Why are people artifically trying to give one antenna a advantage over another. Testing antennas is easy, yet you guys are making so many variables come into play.
There are common laws of physics here longer antennas have more gain/lower TOA, changing the height of the feed point makes antenna work better. Can you get a 1/4 wave GP to work better than the best 5/8, .64 wave ? Yes just raise the 1/4 wave up higher. Stop trying to make the antennas equal because they are not, seems many here are trying to take away the benefit of the longer antenna cause in the end thats the benefit of it's performance , Length.
End of Quote Mr suburban.
Oke, Ill try again…It is not as difficult to understand.
Imagine a 20 wavelength long collinear antenna.
Now bottom feed it or central feed it…that means a height advantage of 10 wavelengths.
It would only be logical wich one in this case is the winner. with your average tetst with the village next door.
Secondly feedpoint height?....oke..here goes again…take a halvewave endfed vertical…
You could bottom feed it but top feed is also possible ofcourse. Again a height advantage.
Your example of testing with mobile antenna and the direct link to feedpoint height is of practical use. But it is not based on “honest” comparisment.
The same would be the case with a ¼ wave MW antenna or a ½ wave MW antenna simple for practical use you cant put them equal.
That’s one of the reasons antennas are scaled in order to test them!
Going through your last alinea: .
I agree that longer angtennas have most of the time more gain. But NOT always a lower TOA.
There are quiet a few more situations where a ¼ GP can outperform a 5/8 wave and that is not only by adding the heigth the 1/4 wave.…that "thinking"would be quite inaqurate.
And don’t set your mind only to verticals. Think about horizontal antennas aswell…if you want to compare antennas and set a “standart” you must involve every possible antenna, not only mobile antennas.
The question asked is what do we want to measure? If that is Gain.
It is commen knowledge that a 5/8 wave has about 3,5 dBI Gain.
If you agreed on that, you agree on being wrong when saying “feedpoint” height.
That 3,5 dBI is under a certain angle isn’t it?
If you would compare that with other antennas with a different take off angle (but at the same feedpoint height) You will have a much larger difference. Though we already esthalished the gain of a 5/8 wave as a “known” fact.
You are speaking about the advantege of ground gain...oke...with the radiating center of the antenna of both antennas at equal distance from the earth that advantege of gain would be equal!
You can verify that by the fact people use stackmaster for a horizontal stack in order to change TOA.
Now, I can understand if one tests mobile antennas it is feedpoint height, as that would be practical as mentioned. And the tests will show the results everybody else will see when using it…however I do hope you understand that “practical reasons” are not always ..”fair”…
When we test antennas we do everything to get as close as we can to a "freespace" model. That would not be feedpoint heigth. As that wouldnt not give a equal groundgain...also the TOA can be completly different.
So either you should keep that last factor in mind and dont do DX test.
And finnaly, say you would have 2 antennas "sitting on the ground".
one is 1 meter long the other is 20 meter long. Both are bottum end fed.
The test antenna is a 1 meter high antenna placed at 10 meters heigth at a equal length away from horizontal distance from the two antennas.
The route a signal most travel from the two antennas under test are by far not equal.
I do not know if you ever heard of the Friis transmission formula..that tells is distance has influence on signal strength. And that is one of the things that is not equal with the same feedpoint heigth. Therefor i dont see how you can be correct.
If you place antennas at feedpoint height, exactly then people are giving bennifits to certain antennas.
Regards,
Henry
11 meter Dx antenna systemx