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  2. Dipole antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dipole_antenna

    The bow-tie antenna is a dipole with flaring, triangular shaped arms. The shape gives it a much wider bandwidth than an ordinary dipole. It is widely used in UHF television antennas. Cage dipole antennas in the Ukrainian UTR-2 radio telescope. The 8 m by 1.8 m diameter galvanized steel wire dipoles have a bandwidth of 8–33 MHz.

  3. Inverted vee antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_vee_antenna

    This simplified arrangement has several advantages, including a shorter ground distance between the ends. For example, a dipole antenna for the 80 meter band requires a ground length of about 140 feet (43 m) from end to end. An inverted vee with a 40-foot (12 m) apex elevation requires only 115 feet (35 m).

  4. 40-meter band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/40-meter_band

    A HB9XBG Full Size Vertical Antenna for the 40m-band on Simplon Pass with view to Mount Fletschhorn. The 40-meter or 7-MHz band is an amateur radio frequency band, spanning 7.000-7.300 MHz in ITU Region 2, and 7.000-7.200 MHz in Regions 1 & 3. It is allocated to radio amateurs worldwide on a primary basis; however, only 7.000-7.200 MHz is ...

  5. HB9XBG Antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HB9XBG_Antenna

    The HB9XBG antenna is a vertical dipole antenna for short wave radio amateurs. It was developed by the Swiss radio amateur Walter Kägi, whose call sign HB9XBG is also the designation of the antenna. [1] During the test phase in 2020, HB9XBG built two vertical dipoles – one for the 20-metre amateur radio band and another for the 40-metre band.

  6. Log-periodic antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log-periodic_antenna

    The log-periodic is commonly used as a transmitting antenna in high power shortwave broadcasting [15] stations because its broad bandwidth allows a single antenna to transmit on frequencies in multiple bands. The log-periodic zig-zag design with up to 16 sections has been used.

  7. Loop antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loop_antenna

    Loop antenna, receiver, and accessories used in amateur radio direction finding at 80-meter (260-foot) wavelength (3.5 MHz). As long as the loop perimeter is kept below about ⁠ 1 / 4 ⁠ wave, the directional response of small loop antennas includes a sharp null in the direction normal to the plane of the loop, so small loops are favored as ...

  8. Gain (antenna) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gain_(antenna)

    When considering an antenna's directional pattern, gain with respect to a dipole does not imply a comparison of that antenna's gain in each direction to a dipole's gain in that direction. Rather, it is a comparison between the antenna's gain in each direction to the peak gain of the dipole (1.64).

  9. T2FD antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T2FD_antenna

    Tests done by J.S. Belrose (1994) [7] showed that though the conventional T²FD length is close to a full-size 80 meter (3.5–4.0 MHz) antenna, the antenna starts to suffer serious signal loss both on transmit and receive below 10 MHz (30 m), with the 80 meter band signals −10 dB down (90% power loss) from a reference dipole at 10 MHz.