Remon
Newbie
Another thought: I have seen people using the rtl-sdr blog active patch antenna pointing to a dish with great results. The polarization ain't mirrored since there were no modifications to the antenna itself.
Thank you dlwtrunked!
Could you measure and double check a couple of things for me please?
The patch is 78 x 78 mm? (found 76 x 76 mm somewhere else)
I found this picture and the gaps between the elements look pretty similar. Not 5 mm and 8 mm, but this could be an optical illusion:
View attachment 83151
Did you measure the space between the upper part of the reflector and the bottom of the brass plate? Same for the upper part of the brass plate and bottom of director? Then this would be the same size as the spacers in that antenna.
Only variable for me would be if it's the distance between patch and director that matter or distance between reflector and director. Because I use different materials (single sided 1.5 mm PCB with 0.35 mm copper, total of 1.85 mm)
Last but not least: what is the size of the reflector?
Sorry I ask so much.
Another thought: I have seen people using the rtl-sdr blog active patch antenna pointing to a dish with great results. The polarization ain't mirrored since there were no modifications to the antenna itself.
I have seen that and it puzzled me. But I would not be surprised if the antenna responds somewhat to the reverse polarization and in addition am not sure what happens in regard to polarization if you are not at the right feed point. Antennas can be funny. (I remember once (over 50 years ago) building what was supposed to be a VLF converter. It did not work as such but worked great as a VHF converter as long as I did not add an antenna of any sort at all --the power feed must have been acting as the antenna for that,)
If you take a circular polarized antenna, a patch, a helix or whatever and stick it in front of a dish for more gain, it will swap the polarity of the antenna. So if you have a RHCP patch antenna and stick it in front of an old DirecTV reflector or similar you will have a higher gain but LHCP antenna that should not pick up RHCP. That's how it works and if its not working like that then the antenna (patch) is linear pol and not circular.
Its possible you don't believe me but I've been there, done this a hundred times. Here I'm testing a prototype circular pol antenna in a near field range and the little horn antennas are opposite polarity of what the overall dish is. Different frequency range than what is being discussed but the principals are exactly the same.
View attachment 83155
The spacer between the bottom plate (reflector) and the driven element should be 7mm high (no more, no less). The spacer between the driven element and top plate (director), should be 5mm high) The black plastic screws that I used are 8-32 at least 3/4" long from McMaster Carr. I ordered ones that were 1-1/2" and cut off the excess. I used 2 hole, flange mounted, SMA connectors that were purchased on eBay. There was a problem connected the SMA center pin to the driven element but I used brass tubing that I fabricated to fit the SMA. To accept the tubing O.D., I drilled a #51drill hole in the driven element.Here are the Airgap Patch Antenna measurements
VNA measurements are find and dandy, but how about using a known good pair of circular pol antennas and measure the cross pol rejection? That will tell you if the design is right and/or explain why the antenna can be peaked by rotation or if it works the same when using a LHCP or RHCP connection.
Another thing if the design is not actually circular pol or if its not built right, you can loose up to 3dB of gain using a liner pol antenna to receive a circular pol signal.