- This topic has 11 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 7 years, 7 months ago by deepredblue.
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28th July 2008 at 04:06 #53226MKTGuest
1)
Why do they have provided two options for tilt in antenna, ie
Electrical & Mechanical2)
What will happen if we have different degrees of tilt for mechanical & electrical at an antenna? say 2 degree for mechanical and 4 degree for electrical.
3)
What is the standard practice in industry for tilts (electrical & mechanical) to achieve the objective of
a) Coverage
b) Capacity
c) indoor coverage
4)
How can we check the values if tilt for mechanical and electrical for an antenna?
5)
How does remote electrical tilt work? Any special antenna?
Regards
MKT
28th July 2008 at 06:14 #53227MohitGuestHi MKT…
1)One basic reason for diffrent tilts is, bcoz Electrical tilt is having less backlobe nd sidelobe as compared to mechanical tilt.
so in electrical tilt reduces the interference.2)There is no such standard practise followed…but wat i have seen is that 2 deg of electrical is default.
3)values of tilt can be seen physically….for electrical tilt we had a nobe at the bottom of the antenna….nd mechanical tilt is given at the upper end of the antenna….where a clamp is move to adjaust the tilt.
28th July 2008 at 08:06 #53228pixGuestMKT,
I have written the formula to compute the tilt based on the cell range you need to achieve. Check the related post.http://www.erlang.com/forum/erlang/thread.htx?thread=4196
Standard practise in urban environment : 6 to 8 degrees tilt.
Electrical vs. mechanical : easier to set up, easier to modify, backlobe is tilted as much as the front lobe, less visual impact, remote adjustment possible.
So it is good to buy antennas with default 8 degrees electrical downtilt.
If mech and elect are put together (this is oftenly done), you just sum both tilts. 4+2 = 6 degrees of effective downtilt.
So if 8 degrees elec tilt is too much, you can always apply some uptilt. This will further reduce the backlode 🙂
Regards,Pix
23rd January 2009 at 09:57 #53229Kwace PapaGuestwhy do mechanical and electrical tilt
23rd January 2009 at 10:00 #53230Kwace PapaGuesthow to prepare positive stop 7&8 connectors
24th February 2009 at 13:01 #53231nitin tomarGuestcan anybody provide me the formula for mechanical tilt(somewhat based on tan or tan inverse).
24th February 2009 at 19:41 #53232pixGuestgo there.. in the address bar, replace the 4202 by 4196.
thread=4196
23rd November 2009 at 13:07 #53233shailesh kumar ojhaGuestplease give me answer of above question
23rd November 2009 at 13:47 #53234PixGuestHi,
What is the above question ?5th June 2011 at 12:49 #53235kamalGuestplese help me to get answer for the followings
1)One basic reason for diffrent tilts is, bcoz Electrical tilt is having less backlobe nd sidelobe as compared to mechanical tilt.
so in electrical tilt reduces the interference.2)There is no such standard practise followed…but wat i have seen is that 2 deg of electrical is default.
3)values of tilt can be seen physically….for electrical tilt we had a nobe at the bottom of the antenna….nd mechanical tilt is given at the upper end of the antenna….where a clamp is move to adjaust the tilt.
MKT – 28 Jul 2008
1)
Why do they have provided two options for tilt in antenna, ie
Electrical & Mechanical2)
What will happen if we have different degrees of tilt for mechanical & electrical at an antenna? say 2 degree for mechanical and 4 degree for electrical.
3)
What is the standard practice in industry for tilts (electrical & mechanical) to achieve the objective of
a) Coverage
b) Capacity
c) indoor coverage
4)
How can we check the values if tilt for mechanical and electrical for an antenna?
5)
How does remote electrical tilt work? Any special antenna?
Regards
28th November 2011 at 13:17 #53236DeonGuestI wonder if anybody can help with an Electrical down tilt formula I require to adjust the cable lengths on the phasing harnesses as a factor for 2 or 4 stack dipole arrays when the required degrees down tilt is known and the frequency is known.
12th May 2017 at 09:19 #53237deepredblueGuestHow does el. tilt works ?
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