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Antenna R&D
Antenna Gain - Is it the ultimate measure of a better antenna?
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<p>[QUOTE="EscapeVelocity, post: 33163, member: 3771"]JER, its a common solution for multipath to add an antenator into the line, the pupose being to reduce the level of the interfering multipath signal to levels that the tuner cannot decipher, while still maintaining the primary signal at levels the tuner can decipher. </p><p></p><p>The same can be achieved with a smaller antenna with less gain..... (decreases both signal and noise like inserting an atenuator above).</p><p></p><p>or a tighter beamwidth ie more side/back/top rejection which increases the signal to noise ratio.[/QUOTE]</p><p></p>
[QUOTE="EscapeVelocity, post: 33163, member: 3771"]JER, its a common solution for multipath to add an antenator into the line, the pupose being to reduce the level of the interfering multipath signal to levels that the tuner cannot decipher, while still maintaining the primary signal at levels the tuner can decipher. The same can be achieved with a smaller antenna with less gain..... (decreases both signal and noise like inserting an atenuator above). or a tighter beamwidth ie more side/back/top rejection which increases the signal to noise ratio.[/QUOTE]
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Antenna Gain - Is it the ultimate measure of a better antenna?
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