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Re: Circularly-polarized antennas for two-way?


 

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I believe there was some research using both horizontal and vertical polarity with pagers back in pager days.

I think it was Bogner that made the antennas for 900 Mhz. Pagers are seldom vertical or horizontal. The test were in deep urban areas. What I remember about the results was about a 3dB improvement in receiving pages.

They decided that down tilt was more effective for a lower cost.



On 11/20/2022 5:12 PM, John Huggins wrote:

I've gone down this rabbit hole as well.? There's some ancient documentation out there showcasing some experiment?where a linear and circular antenna at a repeater site were choosable by the users (via DTMF) I guess to get a consensus?which one offered?what the users' observed?as "mo better."? Apparently?the CP won the election.

It's said even with vertical mobile antennas, the randomness of reflections of things can cause fluttering and such and CP on the mountain top alleges to help with this.

All this in mind, I'm actually in a position to test exactly this here in Virginia in the upcoming year... so I am.? Stay tuned.

73
John, kx4o?

On Sun, Nov 20, 2022 at 5:48 PM Matt Wagner <mwaggy@...> wrote:
Howdy,

I went down a little bit of a rabbit hole reading about the use of circular polarity in antennas. I'm curious if anyone's experimented with it for repeaters or traditional two-way stuff.
But, while I can read lots of theory about circular polarity in antennas, and see people using it for various purposes, I've found absolutely nothing about people running it on traditional two-way systems. Is this something people have played around with? It sounds like it could be useful, but I can't possibly be the first to have thought of this, so I wonder if it ends up not working out well?

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