using the traditional HAAT number is not going to be very helpful because HAAT is calculated using measurements at distances out to 10 miles. the required coverage area of my repeater does not exceed 2 miles from the repeater site. that being said...
it's a coastal city so obviously ground elevations start at sea level. the highest elevation in the city is 85 ft AMSL. very casual topography with no cliffs or valleys or anything like that. elevations rise gradually with minor fluctuations as you go inland.
the repeater is on a building that's over 300 ft tall and it's located on a site that's 25 ft AMSL. simple math will tell us that the highest piece of land is still over 240 ft below the antenna and less than 2 miles away.
the antenna info...
looking at an RFS antenna model number 455. it's a 10dB gain antenna with a 7 degree beamwidth of the primary lobe. from the beam pattern chart, the secondary lobes below horizontal seem to come in at about 4-5 dB gain. so it doesn't appear to be a slouch up close.
my observations....
let's say we have this 7 degree beamwidth antenna with NO downtilt. the primary lobe will cover from 3.5 degrees above horizontal to 3.5 degrees below horizontal, correct? if i was standing next to my repeater antenna and i looked up at an angle of 3.5 degrees i'd see airplanes. i'm not in the air-traffic control business so that seems silly to point a transmitter up there.
all my locations are down below the horizon. much below. i did some trig calculations and if you were to draw a line down from the repeater antenna to the ground at a 3 degree down angle, you'd intersect the ground approximately 6200 feet from the repeater site depending on the fluctuations in terrain.
so with a 3 degree down angle, the center of the primary lobe would be aimed 6200 feet away from the antenna. now it's a 7 degree beamwidth so it will still cover from 0.5 degrees above horizontal, down to 6.5 degrees below the horizontal. 6.5 degrees below horizontal calculates out to about 2900 feet from the repeater antenna. so from 2900 feet on out to the horizon, we're covered by the 10 dB gain lobe. from 2900 ft in to the site we still have the 4-5 dB lobes.
i asked for a quote on this exact set-up from a local moto dealer and of course they have better ideas. some other decibel products antenna with about 8 dB gain and a similar beamwidth but NO downtilt. the reason given was because they only recommend downtilt on sites such as a campus or industrial park.
take a look at the picture below for an illustration of my point. the yellow area is a crude representation of the 7 degree beamwidth of the 10 dB gain lobe. doesn't the bottom version make more sense than the top version? am i so stupid that everything i ask for must be 2nd guessed? or is my logic correct on this? please be honest with your answer because if i'm stupid i should really know so i don't hurt myself with scissors or something.