WSBV579 Posted April 26 Report Share Posted April 26 First off, I'm still learning about radios and such. Basically all the repeaters in my area are south of me. I can hit one kinda reliably at over 30 miles, but I noticed the other day that I was hearing another that about 45 miles away that I can't normally hear...I assume the weather conditions were good that day. Anyway, if I tilt my Tram 1477 antenna slightly south, rather than straight vertical, will that help my reach? I'm adding an extension onto my mast next week, so I could force a tilt then if it makes a difference. If it won't make a difference, than I won't bother trying to tilt it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Socalgmrs Posted April 26 Report Share Posted April 26 Your going to get many more data buy adding to the mast. Tilting the antenna will mess up your radiated pattern. I’d just sell the tram and by a 712efc and fix all your problems but that’s just me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WSBV579 Posted April 27 Author Report Share Posted April 27 Well, my disposable budget has been eaten up by other unexpected obligations this month, and with the hobby getting rather expensive, I told my wife that I'd wait to upgrade anything else until later next year...other than the cheap extension I'm adding to the mast. So, a different antenna is out of the question at the point, which is why I'm trying to make the best of what I have available. I'll add the extension and see what I think after that I guess. WRUU653 and SteveShannon 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BoxCar Posted April 27 Report Share Posted April 27 Your radiation pattern from an omni antenna would look like a beach ball with a weight pushing down at the top making the top and bottom flat. Tilting the antenna lifts one side of the ball but pushes the other side down reducing signal strength to the horizon. The side pointing up will send more signal toward clouds and possibly also reducing signal strength at te horizon. The best result is keep the antenna vertical and increase height. WRUU653, WRXB215, SteveShannon and 1 other 2 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WSBV579 Posted April 27 Author Report Share Posted April 27 36 minutes ago, BoxCar said: Your radiation pattern from an omni antenna would look like a beach ball with a weight pushing down at the top making the top and bottom flat. Tilting the antenna lifts one side of the ball but pushes the other side down reducing signal strength to the horizon. The side pointing up will send more signal toward clouds and possibly also reducing signal strength at te horizon. The best result is keep the antenna vertical and increase height. Thanks! That's the kind of answer I was looking for...rather than "jUsT bUy a nEw aNtEnnA!" I appreciate the explanation. WRUU653 and SteveShannon 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nokones Posted April 27 Report Share Posted April 27 Only if you're using a Yagi on a very tall remote mountain top then you may want to tilt it to point into a canyon, valley or gorge, or if you are using it at a lower elevation for a control station and trying to hit a repeater on a high remote mountain top very far away. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteveShannon Posted April 27 Report Share Posted April 27 13 hours ago, WSBV579 said: First off, I'm still learning about radios and such. Basically all the repeaters in my area are south of me. I can hit one kinda reliably at over 30 miles, but I noticed the other day that I was hearing another that about 45 miles away that I can't normally hear...I assume the weather conditions were good that day. Anyway, if I tilt my Tram 1477 antenna slightly south, rather than straight vertical, will that help my reach? I'm adding an extension onto my mast next week, so I could force a tilt then if it makes a difference. If it won't make a difference, than I won't bother trying to tilt it. This article explores your question. The difference is very slight: https://www.hamradio.me/antennas/when-antenna-tilt-matters.html WSCH851, BoxCar, WSBV579 and 2 others 4 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AdmiralCochrane Posted April 28 Report Share Posted April 28 I have been able to tilt my HT far enough out of polarization to have my signal go from full readable to barely readable when in contact with a repeater 20 miles away. Also whether the ISS repeater was readable or not (yes, with a regular verticle on a HT). SteveShannon and WRXB215 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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