The small downtilt angle hints a printed circuit serial divider. Spacing antennas for best VSWR in a serial divider (where all power divisions are identical) requires phasing that's just slightly different (less or more ) than 360 degrees from element to element. This slight difference from 360 degrees produces a beam that's tilted off the horizon. If you changed frequency on this antenna the beam would move up and down, so it's typically a narrow band antenna design.
The practical limit for this type antenna is probably greater than 10 degrees and would depend on your operating bandwidth.
For normal arrays, there is no scan limit for good antenna engineers with good software. If you just guess at the antenna design, antenna pattern blindspots (due to mutual coupling) can occur when you scan off broadside at angles beyond ?say 30 or 40 degrees. The further out you scan, the more likely you get ugly blind spots. It's hard to scan out to 60, 70 or 80 degrees over a wide frequency range without some real ugly antenna patterns. We recently designed and built a large printed circuit antenna array that scans from broadside to endfire.
kch