Here's the video. THis was posted on Facebook in the group.
So some explanation.
Think of an antenna's radiation pattern as a donut looking at it from the side. It looks a lot like to circles in side by side with the antenna in the middle between the two circles. This is the pattern of a UNITY (0 dB) gain antenna. Something known as an isotropic radiator. When you look at antenna gain numbers they will typically be listed in dBi. The i in there refers to this type of antenna. But the important thing here is the antenna radiates power in ALL directions almost equally with a null directly above and below it.
So then we start talking about antenna GAIN. Gain manifests in a manner similar to crushing the donut equal distances from the bottom and the top. With the pattern being pushed out to the horizon at the cost of radiation both above and below the plain that the antenna is on. If you take this to extreme you CAN in some situations create a null at ground level under the antenna and out some distance from the tower. BUT you need enough height to make this happen. I actually know of a repeater that has this issue that is currently on the air at a local TV station. The repeater and antenna are located at 750 feet above the ground and the antenna is a DB-420 high gain UHF antenna. This repeater will talk to Indiana just fine, but you can't talk to it unless you are a minimum of 5 miles from it from the ground. The helicopter that it was setup to communicate with had no issues because it flew in the pattern of the antenna.
So how does this effect your GMRS repeater and it's coverage??? It DON'T. Not unless you happen to have a VERY high gain antenna that is on a very tall tower or happen to be near the top of a high hill above a valley that is 700 foot down and inhabited with people you want to talk to. THEN and ONLY THEN does this come into play.
I have a DB-420 antenna mounted at 180 feet up at the tallest point in the county. I have no issues with using it to communicate with locally and even from the tower lot. It works fine.
Another thing you need to consider if you are looking at down tilt of an antenna. That being the UP tilt of the opposite side of the antenna. If you were to tilt your antenna DOWN to talk into a town or someplace below your antenna, then you tilt the other side of the pattern UP into space killing the ability to communicate in that direction at all. And frankly there are better ways of dealing with an antenna system that has this issue with local coverage. You add a second antenna and a power divider lower on the tower and if needed a yagi or corner reflector antenna to cover the area you need covered and only having a SMALL effect on the overall coverage footprint form the main antenna.
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WRKC935
Here's the video. THis was posted on Facebook in the group.
So some explanation.
Think of an antenna's radiation pattern as a donut looking at it from the side. It looks a lot like to circles in side by side with the antenna in the middle between the two circles. This is the pattern of a UNITY (0 dB) gain antenna. Something known as an isotropic radiator. When you look at antenna gain numbers they will typically be listed in dBi. The i in there refers to this type of antenna. But the important thing here is the antenna radiates power in ALL directions almost equally with a null directly above and below it.
So then we start talking about antenna GAIN. Gain manifests in a manner similar to crushing the donut equal distances from the bottom and the top. With the pattern being pushed out to the horizon at the cost of radiation both above and below the plain that the antenna is on. If you take this to extreme you CAN in some situations create a null at ground level under the antenna and out some distance from the tower. BUT you need enough height to make this happen. I actually know of a repeater that has this issue that is currently on the air at a local TV station. The repeater and antenna are located at 750 feet above the ground and the antenna is a DB-420 high gain UHF antenna. This repeater will talk to Indiana just fine, but you can't talk to it unless you are a minimum of 5 miles from it from the ground. The helicopter that it was setup to communicate with had no issues because it flew in the pattern of the antenna.
So how does this effect your GMRS repeater and it's coverage??? It DON'T. Not unless you happen to have a VERY high gain antenna that is on a very tall tower or happen to be near the top of a high hill above a valley that is 700 foot down and inhabited with people you want to talk to. THEN and ONLY THEN does this come into play.
I have a DB-420 antenna mounted at 180 feet up at the tallest point in the county. I have no issues with using it to communicate with locally and even from the tower lot. It works fine.
Another thing you need to consider if you are looking at down tilt of an antenna. That being the UP tilt of the opposite side of the antenna. If you were to tilt your antenna DOWN to talk into a town or someplace below your antenna, then you tilt the other side of the pattern UP into space killing the ability to communicate in that direction at all. And frankly there are better ways of dealing with an antenna system that has this issue with local coverage. You add a second antenna and a power divider lower on the tower and if needed a yagi or corner reflector antenna to cover the area you need covered and only having a SMALL effect on the overall coverage footprint form the main antenna.
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