Do wideband yagi antennas exist?

KPMDWhistler

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Joined
Sep 6, 2023
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42
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LA County, CA
I just got interested in radio again after a long break, so bare with my little radio knowledge.

I'm looking for a directional antenna like a yagi that will allow me to listen to a broad range of VHF and UHF frequencies, somewhere between 108-902mHz.
The reason I need such a huge range is because I live near an air force base with a very wide variety of frequencies, and when I travel to Vandenberg I want to be able to hear the repeaters there very easily. Vandenberg SpaceX launch controll is around 850-880mHz, and the bands I listen to at the base range from 112-470.

Also I know that I may be asking for the impossible so please feel free to educate me.
 

G7RUX

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Joined
Jul 14, 2021
Messages
672
I just got interested in radio again after a long break, so bare with my little radio knowledge.

I'm looking for a directional antenna like a yagi that will allow me to listen to a broad range of VHF and UHF frequencies, somewhere between 108-902mHz.
The reason I need such a huge range is because I live near an air force base with a very wide variety of frequencies, and when I travel to Vandenberg I want to be able to hear the repeaters there very easily. Vandenberg SpaceX launch controll is around 850-880mHz, and the bands I listen to at the base range from 112-470.

Also I know that I may be asking for the impossible so please feel free to educate me.
Are you looking for an antenna to install at home or one you can take with you to sites?

if you are looking for a home antenna then a log-periodic antenna will likely be the way to go but be aware that to cover that range with appreciable gain across the range it will be a reasonably large antenna. You will need to install it high and clear, vertically polarised and with a rotator. If you are fairly near the sites of interest then you could well get away with either a discone or one of the range of available wideband active VHF/UHF antennas to give omnidirectional coverage. This would likely be a much cheaper and more robust installation without the need for any moving parts.

For use around Vandenberg you probably wouldn’t need a directional antenna if close by and using a portable receiver.

Personally, if money were no object in this scenario I would go for the rotatable log-periodic mounted VP on a mast at home and supplemented with a second, co-mounted omni antenna I can switch to if needed, preferably with separate feeder. For the portable setup I would opt for a couple of whip type antennas for the main bands I was interested in receiving.
 

dlwtrunked

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Dec 19, 2002
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I know I'm nitpicking, but the proper name is "log aperiodic" - aperiodic means "untuned".
Well more precisely, it is about impedance.
And the antenna in the replies are probably periodic.
 

Ubbe

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Sep 8, 2006
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10,079
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Stockholm, Sweden
I know I'm nitpicking, but the proper name is "log aperiodic" - aperiodic means "untuned".
I've never seen that name being used. But it is a tuned antenna, there's always at least one pair of elements that are tuned to the frequency within the covered frequency range. The distance between elements are increasing in a logarithmic fashion along the boom. So logically it should be called a log periodic design.

/Ubbe
 
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