If performance is what you seek, consider using either a second repeater receiver or a circular polarized antenna. See attached charts that show that any signal received with the signal polarization off by 45 degrees is down 3 dB and between 45 and 90 degrees it increases to at least 30 dB. Many studies have shown that only about 15% of the signals received are true vertical, and the vast majority vary between 0 and 90 degrees due to signal multi-path. In other words, only true visual line-of-sight is true vertical polarization, as everything else is multi-path, twisting and turning as you walk or drive, bouncing off buildings, signs, cars and everything out there.
Using a second diversity receiver is the secret of success for cellular systems. At first they used antennas spaced about 10 wavelengths apart, then later found cross-polarized antennas, like four stacked dipoles in an X pattern worked better. If your brand of equipment does not support satellite or second receivers, then a circular polarized antenna is your next best choice to consider.
Land mobile still operates in the proverbial stone ages, relying upon massive signal strength to overcome multi-path. Adding a satellite or second receiver will improve repeater input performance by 10 to 15 dB, mostly by eliminating almost all multi-path fading. This works for analog or digital systems. This is usually referred to as receiver voting. With analog, they use S/N or RSSI voting. With digital, the first receiver with a correct check-sum per packet is used.
This is way more important that trying to squeeze another 3 dB antenna gain out of your system.