Somewhere in the last century (1998 or 1999, I think), I wrote an intro article
about antennas for home stations. The specifics may be a little dated, but I
believe the concepts are still valid--maybe more so today with only LEOs to
work. If you are interested, here is the,admitedly aged, article:
http://web.archive.org/web/20001005114432/http://members.aol.com/k5oejerry/analysis.htm
If you want the short version (don't we all?), here's the summary:
1. Big antennas for LEO satellites are a personal choice, but not the only one
that works.
2. Elevation control is nice to have, but not mandatory either. The need for
elevation control is related to the gain of the antennae and the size of your
budget.
3. Ditto for automatic control of the antenna array.
4. Popular options, that will all work, are listed in decending order of
complexity and cost (you choose):
A. Oscar Class Station: big CP beams, G-5400, auto-tracking, etc.
B. VHFer station: using less expensive beams already on the tower and
just adding elevation control (PA3GUO posting)
C. HOA Restrictions Special: small 3 or 4 ele beams, good preamps at the
antennas, and an amplifier in the attic. Elevation control not required.
For the price of a new G-5400 you could turn that dual-band HT into a mini-OCS:
$150 for a pair of small V/U beams, $150 for a UHF preamp, $75 for a TV rotor,
and $100 for an 80 W VHF amp. But then you would be tempted to run FD as 1D
and all your pals would lose respect for you :-)
73,
Jerry, K5OE
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