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Re: [TowerTalk] 1/4 wave vertical with counterpoise

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] 1/4 wave vertical with counterpoise
From: David Gilbert <ab7echo@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 17 Jan 2026 15:30:54 -0700
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>

K9YC said "Takeoff angle is a stupid concept.".

That is hardly true.  Focusing ONLY on the gain at maximum takeoff angle may be misleading, but when comparing the same antenna at different heights or comparing the same antenna over different ground conditions, I don't know of any situation where the difference in angle of maximum signal strength doesn't mean there is also a difference (good or bad) at every other angle.  In almost every case, if I want to get more gain at lower angles I have to work to depress the angle of maximum radiation ... again, given the same antenna.

Of course it's a totally different situation when comparing different antennas.

By the way, in my recent video there were reasons why I didn't bother to show all of the plots on the same scale like you keep harping.  For one thing, there were so many plots that if I put them all together the result would have been gibberish.  Secondly, the shapes of the elevation plots and the various signal strengths were so similar in almost all cases that ti wasn't necessary ... which was pretty much the point of the video in the first place.  Besides, the video was already well over 20 minutes and getting too long.

Dave   AB7E



On 1/17/2026 3:05 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
On 1/17/2026 12:56 PM, Brian Beezley wrote:
I never worry about takeoff angle, which I take to mean the angle of the maximum lobe in the elevation plane. Communication takes place at angles determined by path distance, ionospheric height, ionospheric tilt, and probably more. It does not necessarily occur where any particular lobe is located. I generally pick what I think is a representative low angle, usually 5 degrees, and compare gain for all antennas I'm considering there.

YES!  Takeoff angle is a stupid concept. For those reading the mail, look at the link I posted about antenna planning, which contains plots of multiple conditions on the same scale, and compare the dB difference between those conditions at the same vertical angle. While propagation takes place at all angles, for the most part, low angles are most important, especially on the lower bands.

All of these plots look similar, so looking only at the field strength at max misses a lot. And both NEC and ARRL plots automatically scale plots to that maximum value. When using NEC for designs, it's helpful to save a plot for one condition, then import it into the screen for variations we make. The cursor on the imported design will read out the difference from the current design. VERY instructive.

Doing this can often point out that curves that look very similar and have little difference in "takeoff angle" can have differences of 3-6 dB at low angles! And look at the differences in how the height of HF verticals changes both their vertical pattern and ground loss!

73, Jim K9YC

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