Directional antennas require a way to change the direction if they are to be useful for most operating. Methods include:
- Mechanical: rotators
- Mechanical: element reconfiguration (e.g. Steppir)
- Electrical: switchable multi-element arrays such as 4-squares and vertical yagis
- Electrical: reversing arrays such as end-fire, reversible yagis, etc.
- Bulk: multiple uni-directional antennas
Many contesters have chosen to forego rotators entirely since they can be unreliable and difficult to service. However, installing a multitude of towers and antennas to compensate can be expensive. Electrically switched arrays can be an effective alternative. I have covered some of these in my blog, and information on all types of these arrays can be found in the literature:
- Low band 4-squares and vertical yagis
- Directional reversible receive antennas such as Beverages
- Reversible yagis where the role of each element changes (e.g. interchanging directors and reflectors)
- Reversible yagis where some elements are interchanged and others are fixed
The first two in the list are most often seen on the low bands -- 40, 80, 160 meters -- since they may be the only way to achieve effective directivity. The last two on the list can be fixed, such as reversible wire yagis, or rotatable, such as reversible conventional yagis. I have found reversible yagis on partially rotatable side mounts allow quick switching and almost full 360° compass coverage.
For productive paths that are 180° apart, reversible wire yagis can be very effective. That works for us in eastern Canada with Europe to the northeast and the bulk of the US to the southwest. In the distant past I had an electrically reversible 2-element yagi for 40 meters that worked well for me during contests and at other times.
All those antennas alter the role of each element when electrically switched. For whatever reason, I was recently musing about the complexity of those arrangements and wondered if there is a simpler method. I came up with one that, although it works, is unlikely to be of broad interest. However the reason it works is sufficiently interesting that it is worth discussion.
It's what I'll call a mirror yagi since the two directions share a common reflector. The other elements are distinct. Switching directions is quite easy, only requiring selection of the driven element.
The question is how well it works. My first version was a 3 element yagi with 5 elements. That's a long boom for the lower bands but it can be quite reasonable at higher HF and at VHF. It could be particularly handy at VHF since it is routine to hunt for stations or openings at various compass directions. A lot of turning of yagis is can be eliminated.
I chose a 3-element model for 20 meters only because it is recent among my designs. The azimuth patterns of the original yagi and the mirror yagi in both directions are plotted above. It is no surprise that the mirror yagi's pattern is identical in both directions since it is fully symmetric. While these plots are for 14.150 MHz the similarity is present across the band.
The pattern of the original yagi is only negligibly different. It is interesting that the gain and F/B of the mirror yagi are slightly better. Yagis are complex antennas and they can surprise us at times. But practically speaking they are identical.
The same is true of the SWR. It is also nearly identical across the band, whether the mirror yagi is fed in the forward or reverse direction. The SWR curve for the original yagi can be seen in a previous article which I linked to above.
Before discussing the perhaps surprising results of this modelling experiment let's look at a conventional 2-element 20 meter yagi; again, yagis scale well to other bands so my choice isn't important, just convenient. This model has constant-diameter elements rather than tapered, but that also doesn't affect the results.
In this case there is noticable current on the reverse direction's driven element. This is visible in the above EZNEC plot of the element currents. That's significant, as will become evident when we inspect the patterns and SWR. Clearly something is different in comparison to the 3-element yagi.
The gain is only slightly worse on the 2-element mirror yagi. As expected, it is the same in both directions. F/B is better than the original 2-element yagi. These patterns are for mid-band, and there are similar differences at other frequencies.
Whether these differences are significant depends on what one wants to achieve. It is certainly a simple antenna that is not too large, even on 20 meters. My interest is for an antenna that allows for easy checking of propagation in other directions without needing to rotate a yagi.
Unfortunately the SWR suffers greater degradation. This is likely to be a problem in most stations. The SWR bandwidth has narrowed significantly, and it is never all that good for 2-element yagis other than a Moxon. A mirror Moxon might eliminate the pattern and SWR differences from mirroring a conventional 2-element yagi. I did not do the experiment, at least not yet, since there are complications achieving mirror symmetry of such a Moxon. There is more to the design than simply adding a driven element for the reverse direction.
The F/B of conventional 2-element yagis is reasonably good only over a narrow bandwidth. Yagis with 3 or more elements do quite a lot better. For a mirror 2-element yagi the poor F/B help to explain their relatively poor performance: there is a strong enough field behind the reflector to couple to the mirror driven element and thus disturb the pattern and the impedance.
With a reasonably high F/B -- 10 to 15 db at a minimum -- mirroring should work well. We see the same thing when tuning a yagi by pointing it up, which we can do with the reflector only a modest height above ground since it doesn't "see" the ground. A greater height is needed with a 2-element yagi for ground coupling to be sufficiently attenuated.
What about mirroring yagis with more than 3 elements? I expect that these will mirror the success (ha!) of the 3-element yagi. These larger yagis -- mirroring doubles the boom length -- rapidly become impractical due to the number of elements and long booms, even at VHF and UHF. I doubt that these are worth the trouble.
I am seriously contemplating a reversible 3-element yagi for 6 meters as a handy tool for checking propagation paths during sporadic E season when opening can be brief and unexpected. It would complement my usual antenna -- 6 elements at 24 meters -- and it isn't too large with a boom length of 4 meters and no rotator required. Not this year, but I'm thinking about it.
Readers may be inspired by this article to come up with applications of mirror yagis that meet their unique requirements. It's one more tool in the antenna designer's toolbox.







































