I'm not sue what happens if the beam is more than 1/4 wave above ground but the
change should be very small at that height. Below 1/4 wave you should get a
decrease.
Hans - N2JFS
On 5/26/16 8:37 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
> On Thu,5/26/2016 8:24 PM, Don W7WLL wrote:
>> Lowering the height of an antenna above ground, such as a beam, will
>> cause the resonant freq to decrease, increase?
>
> Decrease. But not always -- I have a 10M beam at about 15 ft that goes
> up! The variable here is mutual coupling between elements and between
> elements and ground.
>
> Another error in using SWR as the indicator of resonance is that
> feedpoint Z changes with height, and in a very complicated way (and
> because of mutual coupling to ground). In general, low dipoles (as a
> fraction of a wavelength) are lower Z, high dipoles are higher. AND --
> feedpoint Z is also affected by the quality of the ground.
>
> SO -- we may THINK the resonance is affected by the height as
> indicated by the low value for SWR, but it's actually the feedpoint Z
> changing!
>
> 73, Jim K9YC
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