eeemcee said:
That's why I'm confused: for instance, television transmitting and receiving antennas are usually horizontal here but vertical in the UK, AM broadcast antennas are usually vertical are these for convenience or effectiveness?
mainly technical reasons ... If the main TV transmitter is horizontally polarised, then any small translator transmitters used to
cover geographical shadow areas will be vertically polarised to maintain a signal separation that different polarisations
afford. This even allows for the low power transmitters to often be on the same frequency as the main high power transmitter.
The house in a geographic shadow zone and also getting the signal on a different polarisation means it's likely to only receive the small low power translator signal.
eeemcee said:
A yagi log periodic has a gain of 7dB, does a circular have the same? it's much more compact, does it's gain Vs it's different polarity
result in a gain of only 4 dB when receiving/emitting from/to a monopole?
As
@tech99 said ... be careful there
a log period Yagi doesn't have a gain of 7dB ...
Firstly, an antenna gain is mainly a function of how many elements it has. a 3 element yagi has approx 6dBi, a 10 element Yagi, 10dBi
A wide band yagi generally has a gain of approx 6dBi ... namely that of a 3 Yagi on any frequency within the range of the log-periodic's bandwidth
Secondly, we never refer to an antenna gain as just plain xx dB gain, as it is meaningless.
The gain of an antenna ALWAYS has a reference to something. The 2 common references are to an
isotropic radiator gain = 0,
so we can say that a given antenna, a Yagi, loop, etc has a gain of xx dB
i gain over an isotropic radiator.
The other is the gain over ( as referenced to) a dipole, so you antenna can have a gain of xx dB
d. From memory a
dipole has a gain of approx 2.3 dBi (gain over an isotropic radiator)
Also from memory, there is something like 25 - 30 dB difference between horizontal and vertical polarisation. As a result, it gives very good isolation.
On long distance HF propagation, this isn't really an issue/factor as the multiple reflections off the ground and ionosphere really mess
with the polarisation and the signal being received can have very mixed polarisations ... part of the reason for signal fade-outs.
But for shorter range VHF, UHF and up into the microwave bands, polarisation compatibility between TX and RX antennas is critical.
And I personally have proved that time and time again with my ham radio experiments on frequencies from 144MHz through to 24GHz.
My figures should be pretty close, am sure
@tech99 will adjust where necessary

My old memory aint what it used to beDave