Hello Marconi,
The gamma match is a variable capacitor that also forms a variable inductor. By sliding the gamma rod in or out of the gamma tube you are changing the capacitance. By sliding the gamma bracket up or down the driven element where it attaches to the gamma rod, you are changing the inductance.
One experiment I've conducted used a gamma match on a driven element and was able to tune the element for flat VSWR while adjusting the length of the driven element all the way from 1/2 wave to 5/4 wave. The gamma had much more tuning range then I originally expected and seemed to be able to tune almost any length radiator.
The one exception where the gamma could fail to give a match would be if the driven element were significantly shorter then what would be required for resonance. To add electrical length to the antenna we slide the gamma bracket more towards the grounded part of the driven element. At some point this stops looking like adding more radiator length to RF and starts to look like a short circuit.
Generally speaking when an antenna is too short to resonate, we add inductance to the matching network in order to cancel out capacitive reactance. When the antenna is too long, we add capacitance to cancel out inductive reactance. The gamma can do both however, it has limitations when the antenna is too short.
The gamma match is a variable capacitor that also forms a variable inductor. By sliding the gamma rod in or out of the gamma tube you are changing the capacitance. By sliding the gamma bracket up or down the driven element where it attaches to the gamma rod, you are changing the inductance.
One experiment I've conducted used a gamma match on a driven element and was able to tune the element for flat VSWR while adjusting the length of the driven element all the way from 1/2 wave to 5/4 wave. The gamma had much more tuning range then I originally expected and seemed to be able to tune almost any length radiator.
The one exception where the gamma could fail to give a match would be if the driven element were significantly shorter then what would be required for resonance. To add electrical length to the antenna we slide the gamma bracket more towards the grounded part of the driven element. At some point this stops looking like adding more radiator length to RF and starts to look like a short circuit.
Generally speaking when an antenna is too short to resonate, we add inductance to the matching network in order to cancel out capacitive reactance. When the antenna is too long, we add capacitance to cancel out inductive reactance. The gamma can do both however, it has limitations when the antenna is too short.