It's basically the same idea as with a quad antenna. A loop (either
circular or square) fed at the bottom or top has current peaks at the
feedpoint and opposite side of the quad or loop, and voltage peaks at the
side points (90 degrees to the feedpoint). This is similar to a horizontal
dipole antenna, which has horizontal polarization.
There's more to it than that, but that's the basic idea.
73, Zack W9SZ
On Mon, Oct 3, 2016 at 12:38 PM, Mark Spencer <mark@alignedsolutions.com>
wrote:
> Hi does anyone know of a web site that explains why loop yagis are
> horizontally or vertically linearly polarized ?
>
> I recently gave a presentation to a local club on VHF and up weak signal
> operating and when I showed pictures of one of my 1296 loop yagi antennas I
> was asked if they were circularly polarized. I don't think my answer that
> they were sold to me by the manufacturer as being horizontally polarized
> and other local hams use similar horizontally antennas, and as a result I'm
> able to make contacts with them was quite what the audience was hoping for
> (although from the perspective of getting on the air and making contacts I
> believe it was a reasonable answer.)
>
> The next time I give a similar presentation it would be nice to point
> people to a web site that explains this in detail (:
>
> Thanks in advance for any suggestions. (Some google searching didn't
> turn anything up and reading thru the loop yagi section in my arrl antenna
> books also didn't give me an answer.)
>
> 73
>
> Mark S
> VE7AFZ
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