I wonder if (shock horror

Angus
Arghiro wrote: I go sailing to get away from the bloody telly!
Not looking for an argument, but are you sure about the mast top disadvantage? If someone steps on to the side deck making the boat heel by say 5 degrees then the mast will also heel by 5 degrees, as will anything firmly attached to it such as an aerial. That being the case I can see no advantage in deck level mounting other than ease of adjustment. This does, however, ignore vibration which might be an issue at the mast top in strong wind, particularly with a fractional rig.mm5aho wrote:On land, height of antenna is very important. But that's where the antenna stays still, so always points in the same place.
I'd say that on a mast top though a high gain antenna would be rather useless. Even the movement of walking from one side of the boat to the other would put it off beam. (unless QE2).
For that reason, the pushpit probably better, and a moderate gain ant, (say if a yagi, one with only 4-6 elements).
In a marina, an omnidirectional ant might work at masthead. But then it probably has to stay there.
At UHF (where TV works) the polarisation is very important. They're either horizontal or vertical. Getting that wrong is almost as bad as a missing antenna!
If its horizontal (and that's set by the transmitter antenna), then even a simple dipole is directional - best reception when the length of the active element is at 90 deg to the transmitter.