What do you want me to prove? I didn't state a belief but rather a fact, Eznec cannot emulate real life. It cannot take into account attenuation, it cannot take into account the difference between the materials our houses are made out of, coax differences, differences in soldering techniques, antenna switches that Marconi uses that are poor quality, flat ground as apposed to hilly ground. Its a free space emulator which isn't valid in the real world.
In the real world where I live, quarter wave GP's do not perform as good as 5/8th waves, .64 or open sleeve antenna's. How do I know? Because I've had 2. Besides that I know people that have had them and they also believe they don't perform as good. Not saying they don't work just saying they don't perform as good as a 5/8th wave. If they did then everyone would have one because they take up very little space.
With antennae, the money is where the performance is around these parts and no matter what Eznec says that will always be the case.
First about EzNEC accurately duplicating reality... I never said it was just like reality. On multiple times in this very thread I said that it has its limitations. The part of your statement that I was challenging was you claiming it was a single persons attempt to duplicate what happens in reality, which is *NOT TRUE*. NEC2, which is used by EzNEC was developed in 1981 at Lawrence Livermore Labs under contract for the US Navy. There goes the one person's version of how the world works theory you presented. Also, being developed for the Navy, I would expect it to be pretty accurate, definitely more accurate than you obviously think. Again, this does not mean it doesn't have its limitations.
As far as what it can and cannot simulate, I myself, in this very thread, said that its results were akin to a "lab environment". The last time I checked, a lab environment is not the same as the real world. Weather or not EzNEC matched up to the real world was never in question, and definitely not part of *ANY* of my claims, and any assumptions of that on your part *ARE IN ERROR*. All I was trying to say is EzNEC is a tool, and its information as well as that of *ANY* modeling program needs to be taken in context. This was in response to you claiming that anything generated from EzNEC is effectively irrelevant, which again is also clearly not true.
Also, no one here ever once made the claim that a 1/4 wave groundplane antenna was always better than a 5/8 wave groundplane antenna. If that is what you thought was being said or assumed, then you misread everything in this thread. The claim that has been made, and backed up with two separate documents, is that the gain many people think they are getting with a 5/8 wave groundplane antenna over a 1/4 wave groundplane antenna is *NOT AS MUCH AS THEY THINK IT IS*. Often the difference between the two is so small that you can't tell the difference. One of the studies actually shows more of a gain for the 5/8 wave antenna when it is over poor soil conditions, which is counter to what many believe. That being said some of the modeling was done with EzNEC, so the whole article must be irrelevant to you. I suppose you expect me to fall in line with your version of reality over Cebik's study, good luck with that.
Also, when it comes to CB antennas and performance being where the money is, all to often the money is where the snake oil is and the people that fall for it don't know they aren't getting as much performance as they think. That being said, quite often when it comes to CB antennas the money is where the low price is. How many threads on this and other forums are people settling for an Imax 2000 over any number of other more expensive antennas.
How about this real world experience from me. There are two friends of mine that live on the same block with each other, and both are about 25 miles away. One of them has a 102" whip with homemade angled radial wires made of 14 AWG wire on his house, the other has a new version of the Hy-Gain Super Penetrator. They run the same power output from identical radios which were tuned by the same tech (also a friend of mine). I cannot tell the difference between their signals and the S-meter moves to exactly the same point on the scale (not that I trust s-meter reading, which I don't).
In your case the 5/8 wave antenna may in fact be superior, but elsewhere in the world where there are other environmental conditions at play (different hills, different soil conductivity/permeability, etc., you know the same environmental conditions that you mentioned that modeling programs cannot account for) you can expect a far different result.
The DB