I was thinking of having a 3 element yagi but i'm sure i read something somewhere that it has to be 30ft of the ground to be at it's best,theirs no way i could have that in my garden : , i would of liked too have tried one instead of using a vertical.
Freebander wrote:I was thinking of having a 3 element yagi but i'm sure i read something somewhere that it has to be 30ft of the ground to be at it's best,theirs no way i could have that in my garden : , i would of liked too have tried one instead of using a vertical.
Billy 29FB111 wrote: I'm using one at the moment, its only 20ft off the ground and its working fine, obviously the higher you get it the better, but above 1/2 wavelength works fine
The best height for yagis till 5 elements is between 36 and 45 ft. DEPENDING on the size (boom) when I was in Europe I had a lil 3 element beam in the back of my yard only 12fh of the ground.... and it still preformed.
Freebander wrote:I was thinking of having a 3 element yagi but i'm sure i read something somewhere that it has to be 30ft of the ground to be at it's best,theirs no way i could have that in my garden : , i would of liked too have tried one instead of using a vertical.
in the early 80s i had a 4element yagi at only 15ft with good success its the turning circle you have to worry about above trees ect
and yes they were the good old days of proper propagation and president madisons now everybody runs icoms!including me.......
As for whats the best height, well that will change through-out the year as the 'F' Layers in the ionosphere change there height, But generally anything over 25 ft will work, Ideally over 34 ft is better. for low angle radiation your looking to get your take of angle in the region of 5 to14 degrees above 34 ft will get you there. Obviously any structures near the yagi will affect it especially if its metalic. If you go to high then you can actually over shoot you required area, say your looking to work E.U then you dont need it as high as if your trying to work Australia.