Directional Antennas For The Small Unit, Part 2

The use of Directional Antennas are the most basic way to improve communications security even if all you’ve got is a set of inexpensive radios. In Part 1 we talked about the theory of use and why they’re important to have for the dedicated RTO of a small unit. Sending your signal in one direction versus all directions does a couple of things for us- creates security through only sending a signal along the necessary path and second it greatly improves the range along that path. In this section we’re going to discuss the antennas themselves and how they work.

The Yagi

UHF Yagi in the field during the Advanced RTO Course.

Remember just a few years back when every house had those funny antennas on its roof? The ones you had a rotor (or if you were poor you had an set of big channel locks on the pole) to turn to get a better signal on the TV stations you wanted to watch? They’re mostly gone these days but that was a type of Yagi antenna.

Named after two electrical engineers in Imperial Japan during the interwar period, Yagi and Uda, the antenna was a solution to two problems. First, it sent a signal in one direction much further with a lot less power. Second, it listened much stronger in that same direction. It enabled directional communications links with even the very crude radio gear of the day, and found itself in service with the primitive radar systems just coming into use.

Yagis work through having a basic dipole (called the driven element) connected to the radio, with one dipole slightly longer just behind it (called a reflector) and one or more dipoles out front (called directors) that have no electrical connection to the driven element. They work on magnetic harmony- in other words, the reflector reflects the energy from the driven dipole forward, and the directors further pull that energy in the forward direction. The more directors you have, the tighter the beam. In addition, the more directors you have, the higher the decibels of gain you have in that direction- keep in mind that with each 3db of gain, you’ve effectively doubled your radiated power output in that direction. Since gain is in orders of magnitude, for each additional 3db you’re doubling your gain again.

Wait, what? Think about it like this. If you have a three element Yagi antenna, like the one picture above in from the Advanced RTO Course, which has 7.5 decibels of gain, you’ve taken the 4 or 5 watts from a handheld and increased its radiated power to over 20 watts just based on the gain of that antenna, in the direction that antenna is pointed. You’ve taken a very basic tool (the humble handheld) and made a potent communications device while using the same amount of battery power. Not bad. Not bad at all.

But the Yagi also has gain on reception, meaning it hears better in that given direction over a single omnidirectional antenna. That’s why going back to our old over the air TV antenna example above, you’d rotate the antenna towards the direction of the TV station, and why hams use the same antennas on towers to listen in a given direction. Its a heck of a lot of capability in a relatively small package for line of sight (VHF/UHF) use. And since they’re small, they should be part of every patrol loadout.

Moxons

The Moxon is incredibly simple to build.

Similar to the Yagi, a Moxon is a directional antenna that’s wildly simple to build. The best way to describe it is a Yagi with the director removed- a driven element and a reflector. So rather than a tight beam LED flashlight radiation pattern, these are more like a broad maglite. The antenna direction itself is pretty broad compared to the Yagi, but where these really shine is through their simplicity. With just a few pieces of wire and some material for the frame, you can build one in less than an hour and have a directional antenna ready to roll for a team. Check Moxgen for a downloadable program that gives all of the measurements you’ll need for cutting the wires.

Longwire and Resistor

The last directional antenna is known as the Longwire. The Longwire antenna was best known to the Vietnam generation as LRP team members used them for directional communications back to their bases of operations while evading the Signals Intelligence assets of the NVA. As the name would imply, it’s one really long wire that runs to a resistor placed in series with the wire and then driven into the ground. The long wire itself radiates with the ground end running along the earth ground. The resistor works to pull all of the current in its direction and with it most of the radiated energy.

The Longwire antenna rigged up for use. It’s incredibly simple and goes up fast.

Of each of the antennas discussed, the long wire is by far the simplest and most clandestine when used. And it also presents a very low Standing Wave Ratio (SWR) due to the residual energy being pulled to the resistor at the end of the line. Very little gets reflected back to the radio itself, But most of all, it packs up the most compact and is the easiest to build or repair in the field. All you really need is a long run of wire and a high Ohm carbon resistor- just make sure you have a lot of them.

Summing It Up

These three antennas are each fairly easy to build on your own and present a huge advantage over omnidirectional antennas. The security offered through using directional communications is not to be overlooked. For a team of guerrillas communicating critical information, its the only option. But that said it takes a bit of work and training to get right. In part three we’ll be discussing exactly how to do that, covering the basic planning requirements and how to incorporate them into your patrolling equipment.

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17 Comments

  1. Anonymous May 15, 2019 at 07:09

    4.5

  2. Anonymous May 15, 2019 at 11:39

    5

  3. S. B. May 15, 2019 at 12:05

    Good stuff as usual

  4. Badger May 15, 2019 at 12:08

    Good series, thanks. One consideration I’d offer is that if 2 ends are both using directionals it would be best to consider brevity (get it said & get off the air and then move), as well as using the lowest power possible to get the job done (and a Yagi is really good at letting you do this). The group afield doesn’t need their base pointing back at them like a needle on a compass. But the Yagi is a nice thing to have in the toolkit and they can weigh less than the water you’re going to drink today.
    Thanks again. :)

    • NC Scout May 15, 2019 at 14:06

      Thanks for the compliments! The patrol implementations are coming in part 3.

  5. Homer May 15, 2019 at 13:03

    Will building the moxon and longwire antennas be covered in the upcoming advanced rto class?

    • NC Scout May 15, 2019 at 14:05

      Yes it will ;)

  6. Craig L Underwood May 15, 2019 at 16:01

    From an HRO employee, All good stuff and keep educating, you provide great information.

  7. ReallyNot May 16, 2019 at 14:30

    Can a 440mhz (UV) type handheld use a Yagi?

    • NC Scout May 16, 2019 at 20:06

      It absolutely can and that’s usually how my yagis are configured. You’d be surprised what a humble 4w Baofeng can do in the right hands.

      • ReallyNot May 17, 2019 at 12:14

        where would one obtain one of these? smiley antenna doesn’t have any that i could see.

        • NC Scout May 19, 2019 at 20:04

          Arrow Antennas.

  8. Matt in Oklahoma May 16, 2019 at 19:46

    We was too poor to leave a good set of tools on an antenna lol
    Had a clamped piece of metal long enough that “boy” could muscle it around to the right direction based on which of the 2 tv channels we had.
    Now thinking back that 40+ years ago I understand exactly what you are saying

  9. johnyMac May 17, 2019 at 08:50

    I first learned about a Moxon antenna from an earlier article written by NC Scout on his site Brushbeater. I had a newly printed Technical ticket in my hand and I wanted to be able to hit a local repeater about 30-miles away with my only radio – a 5-watt BaoFeng. Followed NC Scouts directions and did a little research and viola! I made my 2-meter moxon. I was able to hit that repeater with no issues. Even better though, when I asked for a signal report I got a “full quieting” report, Thank you NC Scout!

    Usually, I have no problems hitting near-by stations with my 6-meter dipole but of late, probably due to propagation, our small local net on 6-meters is hit or miss. This is why I have on my to-do list for the summer, a 6-meter moxon antenna build.

    Great stuff!

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