A few days ago I turned my Broadside Double KAZ Array around to aim towards the 
east by switching the ends that the feed xfmrs and termination resistances are 
on. Now I have nice back nulls to the west and a narrow beam towards the east. 
Last night was quite interesting and again proved the array concept and shows 
the benifits of a narrow beamwidth and good side nulls. 

On 1410 I have a big pest and a near local WRMN 14.5 miles away at 215 degrees. 
This is off to the side of the best area of back null, but a single antenna 
does help reduce it. However, the array seems to clobber this station and I was 
getting CKSL mixed with CJWI's mostly Haitien stuff (new for me) with WRMN a 
very distant 3rd.

With a side by side spacing of only 260 ft (all my room here) most of the 
beamwidth reduction effects and good side nulls are only noticed on the upper 
part of the band where the wavelengths are shorter. Also, low angle skip and 
groundwave is affected more than high angle skip since the phase difference 
between signals arriving from the sides (N and S) isn't much from high angles 
when only 260 ft apart.

Being NW of Chicago, many of my local and fringe pests are located SE of me or 
SSE. The array clearly gets less WRDZ 1300 than a single element leaving WOOD 
dominant and clearly less WGRB 1390 which resulted in WFBL 1390 from Syracuse 
being in last night. Additionally, the more narrow beamwidth of the array 
(calculated at about 65-70 deg for GYs) definately improves the clarity of what 
is heard on the GY channels. 

1640 provided a great illustration of beamwidth, side nulls and back nulls when 
I tuned by and had a  weak TIS atop occasional traces of normally heard Disney 
from Milwaukee. I could barely copy the TIS on peaks above distant T-storm 
noise but there were several Strongsville ments and www.strongsville.org from 
this community info stn. in a Cleveland burb. There was little trace of 
Milwaukee in the north side null, no trace of WTNI in the south side null, and 
no trace of OK or UT stations in the cardioid back null caused by the resistive 
terminations.

I urge other DXers who have access to a decent amount of land to try arraying 
two cardioid type loop antennas. To get good broadside array effects it isn't 
necessary to take the time to build the more complicated double loop type 
antennas I use for a permanent home situation. Simply using a tree for each 
support for a delta flag and having them 300 ft (better 400 ft) apart would 
yield very nice patterns.

73 KAZ Barrington IL
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