Thursday, Apr 06, 2017 at 14:04
Shaker, what you say about db verses flat desert is fundamentally true, though keep in mind 4 things.
-Like for like location, higher gain will 'focus" the beam horizontally. and give you better performance. However the effect is not as simple as the marketing stories and pics. A 4.5 - 6 db antenna will almost always perform better than a 3db. - even in hilly environments. And if you are in mountain terrain remember it is still line of sight anyway. Also if you are driving up a
hill, then other cars will be up or down that
hill, in line with the focussed 6db gain antenna's radiation pattern. Similar to if you walked up a
hill at night, you would point the torch up the
hill as you walked. Same same.
-Being line of sight, the transmissions go to the ( radio) horizon. The higher the antenna, the further the horizon. Same physics as lighthouses. And you never see a
lighthouse mounted on a bullbar ( or half way up a
cliff) :-) . The range from roof to roof is about 3- 4 km more than bullbar to bullbar even ignoring the next point.
-A bullbar mounted antenna has to penetrate through the windscreen, you, cargo barriers, window tinting etc. Generally the bottom half of a broomstick antenna, and most of a normal height antenna is not doing much, particularly to the rear.
-Vibrations on the bullbar are greater than on they are on the body of a 4wd, damaging the antenna. You may not even know that your antenna's performance is reduced until it is a catestprohic failure.
In other words, a Broomstick antenna on a bullbar will perform better than a smaller antenna which is also mounted on the bullbar, however your 8 - 9 db bullbar mounted broomstick won't perform anywhere near as
well as a 6db rooftop antenna. The one thing it will improve however is the manufacturers profit, and it looks 'tough' to some who assume they are better.
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