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I'm having a problem getting a good signal up to a repeater site on UHF. I'm running 20W in a neighborhood with lots of trees, and the signal is fading in and out due to trees and the wind.

I can't run any more power. Would 2 UHF Yagis mounted side-by-side, spaced 1 wavelength apart, using the same length coax (50 ohm each; this will make 25 ohms which can be made back to 50 ohms w/ a piece of RG62 35 ohm cable).

Would this give a diversity effect, say when one is noisy and the other may have a good signal getting to the repeater?

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    $\begingroup$ Welcome to Amateur Radio Stack Exchange. Be sure to take the tour at ham.stackexchange.com/Tour $\endgroup$
    – SDsolar
    Commented May 29, 2017 at 20:00
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    $\begingroup$ Could you please "beautify" your question? Proper capitalization (i.e. capital letters at the beginning of sentences, common abbreviations) and spaces after punctuation would make the whole thing much easier to read. Also, you have sentences that start with "would", but don't end in a question mark, so I'm not sure you've finished that sentence with the same thought that you've started it with, and maybe I'm therefore not answering the questions that you meant to ask! $\endgroup$ Commented May 29, 2017 at 20:33
  • $\begingroup$ You should describe your problem a bit better by answering these questions: (0) What UHF band of operation? (1) is the repeater within line-of-site of your station or are there mountains and buildings in the way; (2) what is altitude of repeater antenna (which is often published if the repeater is maintained by a club or org. with website); (3) How high is your antenna? Also, I doubt that trees are causing you problems, I have lots and lots of Douglas Fir, Western Red Cedar, and Hemlock trees blocking the direct access to the repeater I can easily hit on 70 cm band. $\endgroup$
    – K7PEH
    Commented May 29, 2017 at 22:27
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    $\begingroup$ Unless you are combining the antennas in a dynamic way, like switching between them or combining them with weights that change dynamically with conditions, you are not getting a diversity effect. You are just getting an antenna array, changing the radiation pattern. $\endgroup$ Commented May 30, 2017 at 14:58
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    $\begingroup$ @K7PEH Leaves can and do attenuate UHF signals. Just because we can still hit a repeater doesn't mean that the path loss wouldn't be less if the trees were cut down. $\endgroup$ Commented May 30, 2017 at 16:06

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In your post the thing that leaps out is about using a horizontally polarized Yagi to contact a repeater which is commonly a vertical antenna. The signal loss in this situation is large. Try your Yagi antenna with the elements pointing up and down and see which orientation better, horizontal or vertical. Does this make a big enough difference?

As for diversity reception your idea of combining horizontal and vertical signals is one approach. The most simple is switching between two antennas. The ARRL Antenna Handbook goes a step farther suggesting a separate radio for each antenna and listening to both radios.

A simpler approach is have one arm of a UHF/VHF dipole in a vertical position to provide both polarizations in one antenna. (This not a ground plane antenna which is vertically polarized). Here is the antenna model information and 4NEC2 model if you want to tailor it to your situation.

A host of more sophisticated diversity methods exist — as you have found. Because phased vertical and horizontal Yagi antennas were not found you have a research project.

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  • $\begingroup$ phased cross-polarized antennas kind of form one circularly polarized antenna, if I'm not mistaken! $\endgroup$ Commented May 30, 2017 at 9:18
  • $\begingroup$ Did he actually say horizontally polarized? "Side by side" could mean vertically. $\endgroup$ Commented May 30, 2017 at 15:56
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For diversity gain, you'd need to have two receivers (or you just switch to the currently "better" antenna; that's called selection combining in MIMO technology and kind of is the worst possible diversity mechanism).
So, no, with two antennas and only a single receive chain, there's no diversity gain.

You can, of course, build an antenna array. That would actually work by using a impedance-matching combiner to make the reception of both antennas combine constructively. You'd basically achieve a higher directivity by adding array gain to your antenna gain.

Also, I wonder how you can put two antennas at "1 wavelength" distance for the whole UHF band – that covers wavelengths from 10 cm to 1m.

I'm not sure it would help much with the fading problems – these might be happening at larger scales.

As a more general comment: Diversity happens when you have two different signal paths transporting the same signal; different in the sense that the random effects on the signal are independent. That will almost certainly not happen for large-range communication with transmit antennas that are a mere single wavelength apart – I'd not expect any significant gain due to independent signal paths ("multipath") in an outside scenario with two close antennas pointing in the same direction.

In indoor scenarios (e.g. your usual cheap Wifi router with more than one antenna is a diversity/MIMO transceiver!), there's way more diverse multipath, and hence, antennas placed a mere more than half a wavelength apart have a serious chance of picking up a combination of at least two independent paths. Mathematically, the system is modelled such that:

  • We assume one channel response from each transmit to each receive antenna
  • We then put these into a table (and for reasons of simplicity, let's assume these channel impulse responses are completely characterized by a single complex number)
  • We then consider that each receive antenna sees the sum of all the channels that "go to it", applied to the transmit signal
  • And then we consider that the table from above is simply a matrix, and we can multiply that matrix with the transmit signal vector (ie. a vector with the entries of what each transmit antenna sent) to get the output at each receive antenna

With that model in mind, we can let the transmitter choose a transmit vector, so that the process of

  1. taking a vector of the signal to be transmitted
  2. an arbitrary mapping to a transmit vector
  3. applying the channel matrix
  4. and then applying a matrix that we can also arbitrarily choose

gives us multiple, independent channels, over the air, mathematically.

If this is of interest to you: that usually happens by applying a singular value decomposition to the (estimated) channel matrix, so that this matrix gets split into unitary (hence, nicely invertable) matrices and a diagonal matrix (which means that whatever you put into that diagonal matrix in one element has no effect on the other elements).

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  • $\begingroup$ Marcus and Kevin have some great points in this deleted post. But I'm dead tired and headed for bed. Tomorrow is another day. $\endgroup$ Commented May 30, 2017 at 3:24
  • $\begingroup$ Yeah, I am not sure about resurrecting an answer that was deleted by the person who wrote it. He must have had a reason for writing it (and it does contain good info), but also must have had a good reason to delete it afterwards $\endgroup$
    – Scott Earle
    Commented May 30, 2017 at 7:37
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    $\begingroup$ @ScottEarle Indeed, I wrote this answer when tired, then went back, tried to re-read the question, commented on it because it struck me as unclear, largely due to lack of structure and clarity, and then preferred to keep this answer "on the high shelf" until the question was shaped in a way that allowed for sensible answers (which Mike and you made possible!). $\endgroup$ Commented May 30, 2017 at 9:20
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First of all, transmit and receive should behave the same. It will be a good idea to listen to the repeater while moving the antenna (assuming a single one.) Maybe you will find that twisting it for the opposite polarization solves the problem as hinted in a previous answer.

If polarization is correct and moving the antenna several wavelengths from the original position does not help, you should check the difference between horizontal and vertical polarization. In case that difference is small it is possible that you could benefit from using circular polarization. Means stack a H and a V antenna with a 90 degree phase shift. Elements on the same boom or on two separated boom tubes would not matter.

Stacking two antennas side by side is likely to not help at all. A sharper lobe is not what you need. Maybe a very different antenna with a narrow vertical lobe and a wide horizontal lobe could be better.

/Leif

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