It's probably best to use an antenna analyzer and a reflected power meter.
There is no conceivable way that anyone on the internet can remotely evaluate your antenna!
You could spend all the money in the world on random antenna bits because the internet told you to, but with an antenna analyzer, you could build a two meter antenna out of rusty fence wire. buy one!!
That said, the reason why you haven't seen much about ground plane requirements for any antenna is because there isn't one. There's no universal equation. If you're mounting a vertical antenna on a vehicle, you may not be far enough from the ground to experience strong issues in impedance or reflectance due a lack of a ground plane. (proper or not.)
But in the end, you can't tell evaluate the difference between a pie tin, a wire mesh, or radial counterpoise - or whether or not you even "need" a ground plane without the proper equipment.
Hi Sonoronos, I hope I have simply misunderstood some of your comments. First, an antenna fits somewhere between a device that radiates radio energy perfectly, and one that radiates nothing (like a dummy load). Both those extremes, and all in between, can have 50 Ohm resistive response and look great on an antenna analyzer or SWR meter. So, an antenna analyzer might be the worst device to evaluate how well an antenna radiates.
As for finding out what works from questioning actual users on the internet, I would choose that first, rather than relying only on an antenna analyzer, for the above reason. That said, I also use an antenna analyzer, or an SWR meter, or a forward/reverse power meter to verify 50 Ohm resistive (or deviation from it) After the antenna has been designed from experience and experimentation, the type info commonly found on the internet. Then evaluate the antenna's real performance with a field strength meter, or talking to your buddy, LOL.
A ground plane is absolutely defined as part of an antenna system for most common vehicular antennas. The exception might be the half-wave mobile antennas sold as "no ground plane required", but, even those have been optimized to work when a vehicle IS under the antenna.
Bob