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- Nov 9, 2017
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So far it seems strong, it has some 8 watt help, I will try a flat panel also, I have a 15dbi Omni that’s on its way.
A 14 dbi flat panel on its way, and I’m currently using the 16dbi yagi on one and the 9dbi Omni on the other I might try a test with a 9dbi Omni and the yagi on the same amp and see what that result is, in the mountains around peaks and valleys you need all you can get.
Typically on a two antenna system, they are used in "diversity" - both sending and receiving signals, but the remote only ever uses the strongest of the two signals. I had both an omni and unidirectional antenna setup for my Phantom 2's FPV. It worked great.
I believe you are correct. The two antennas were on a Black Pearl FPV - receiving.I don't believe both Antennas would be used for transmit, only for receive. You'll get an overlapping of waves if you had both transmitting.
The yagi has a 23 degree vertical lobe and a 26degree horizontal lobe do you think there is a lot of difference ?
Pretty much flying a straight line and pointed right at where it is flying. I’m not a antenna guy I’m just experimenting
Yes, 23 degree lobe and 26 degree lobe so with only the 3 degrees differential is it a concern if it’s set vertical or horizontal
Well, I rotated 90 degrees this morning on the yagi’s And I lost distance almost 5000 feet sooner than the other
way I won’t judge it on one test alone. And I lost it on both the RC and the video not just the video like I did the other way
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