
You don't see many of these around any more! This is a VHF TV aerial for 405-line transmissions.
This picture was taken in 2000, 15 years after VHF TV transmissions ceased in the UK.
Notice that the director separation changes as you move down the boom - this is to increase the bandwidth of the aerial.
Tony Currie: "The part to the right (Dipole + directors) is for Band III. The part to the left (the X) is the Band I aerial which is a dipole with reflector at 90 degrees.
"These pairs were very common in the late 50s and throughout the 60s. In the earler 50s it was more common to use an H aerial for Band 1 - a straight dipole + reflector. Many aerial manufacturers produced aerials which physically combined the Band I and Band III elements together. The output of each aerial was then fed into a combiner (often just taped to the mast) and thence to a single piece of coax."
If you look closely you can see two pieces of coax, one from the 'X' and one from the folded dipole.