CQ Amateur Radio

All Antennas are Elliptically Polarized

I have covered polarization before, but the interesting ideas about polarization keep cropping up.

Some basics: A horizontal antenna talks to a horizontal antenna. A vertical antenna talks to a vertical antenna. But if you have a vertical antenna on one end and a horizontal antenna on the other end, you see a reduction in signal strength of 3 to 4 S-units or about 20 dB. In a lab environment, you can get 40+ dB signal reduction when cross-polarized. But in the real world, we have hardware hanging off the driven element, radiation from the coax, and reflections off the tower and other objects. So 20 dB is a typical signal

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from CQ Amateur Radio

CQ Amateur Radio10 min read
DXpedition To The Heart Of Rome
1A0C Sovereign Military Order of Malta - Where Extraterritoriality Makes the Difference For a week this past summer, hams around the world were treated to the first operation in four years from the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, an extraterritori
CQ Amateur Radio5 min read
A (Much) Less Expensive Ultrasonic Line Arc Detector
This article describes the use of a satellite TV dish along with a circuit described in an earlier article in QST that can be used to locate arcing on power poles. The original article can be found in the QST archives (April 2006, “A Home-made Ultras
CQ Amateur Radio13 min read
Radio Renaissance: A Retirement Story
Here I am, it is late afternoon and I’m sitting in the backyard with Paula, my bride of 53 years. We are sipping wine and enjoying the end of the day. This is a regular experience for us now. We chat and relax around what I like to call the “eternal

Related