Look at it this way Eddie: Some people seem to think that the impedance matching section and the shunted ground is the absolute end of their antenna transmission and everything below is of no significance. Which in essence is like saying the lower radiator of a dipole isn't important providing we have a 50ohm impedance match which is bullshit.
Anyone who installs an antenna by cutting his mast at a random length, cutting his coax to a random length and provides an electrical path to both of the above without any thought must be a nut case.
But the strange thing is.....that's what most people do, which in reality is allowing their own system to determine the electrical length of the lower radiator with no input from themselves.
Isolating and choking as well as providing a resonant set of radials is akin to making sure both radiators of a dipole are balanced well and are at YOUR control.
Nav, we were talking about an Ugly Balun, and I raised another possible solution maybe using feed line length. I just used modeling to help demonstrate what I saw.
Bob brought up the theory or the technical aspects of feed line length to ground, and if you check close and read Bob's idea about a 1/2 wave or multiple mast length that is attached to the Earth vs. a 1/4 wave or multiple mast length that is not connected to Earth, you will see what Bob and I were getting at.
A couple have asked or presented some real world ideas in this thread, and for me your comments are always welcome, even when you get excited.
I talk about the issues that Bob mentioned, and described some differences I saw in my models, an EFHW that was connected to a mast vs. one isolated at 36' and 48' feet. However, I consider these differences noted in the models as very small, so I think they may well be insignificant in the real world.
You and Bob however, both report to have experienced differences that matter in your work on the idea of isolation. We've all heard plenty of stories that tend to report both success and failure in this regard...using radials or chokes.
My real world experiences also has not shown a difference that I could detect just using my radio. This is in spite of the fact that technically I believe there is something of benefit using the idea of isolation, with suitable radials, along with a working choke if necessary. My thinking says, it all makes sense.
I think these models do show isolation helps decouple the mast from the antenna, and that it makes a little difference that I see in the result. Because this is a small result, it seems to support my ideas on the subject. This is why I suggest the isolation idea probably doesn't really make that big of a difference in the real world. That said, I still accept the claims from you, Bob, and W8JI, saying it works and it does make a measurable difference. Believe me, if I ever experienced such differences as you guys suggest I would be in your camp too.
I have thought about what you and Bob might be experiencing however, in light of the idea that CMC's are said to increase noise on our receivers.
I think I see this very idea manifest quite often using my Starduster.
It is typically a very quite antenna when conditions are quite, and this is a distinction I make in this case. Under such conditions I can usually hear some white noise on several other antennas I might have up and sometimes that noise does not present on the SD'r. In such cases I can often copy a signal that I can only hear on the other antenna.
I can imagine such events appearing as though the SD'r might have more gain and is receiving more signal, but I don't think that is possible...considering right now I have a Gain Master up a little higher to the tip. That is generally a much better antenna, and should produce more gain. I see this happen time after time locally and some times when DX is working too. Of course this could also be just a quirk with angles or locations making the difference. But you guys also have to deal with that possibility too. Personally this is one situation where the reciprocal qualities of antennas may fail...when the antenna is noisy due to CMC's.
However, I say to myself if that SD'r works that good...then who cares what the reason is, if I can hear em' I can talk to em'. I've never tested the idea, but in such cases I can imagine the other end may still see a better signal from the other antenna, but for the noise I could only hear and not copy.