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Old May 25th 04, 03:17 PM
Tam/WB2TT
 
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"Henry Kolesnik" wrote in message
.. .
Richard
This is in response to your answer of last night. Before going to bed I

got
out the book REFLECTIONS II by Walt Maxwell W2DU. I'm typing verbatim

from
page 2-2 and 23-1 for those who don't have the book.page 2-2 "Contrary to
what many believe, it is not true that when a transmitter delivers power
into a line with reflections, a returning wave sees an internal generator
resistance as a dissipative load. Nor is the reflected wave converted to
heat and, while at the same time damaging the final amplifier....the
reflected power is entirely conserved...." from page 23-1 "One of the

most
serious misconceptions concerned reflected power reaching the tubes in the
RF amplifier of the transmitter. The prevalent, but erroneous thinking

was
that the reflected power enters the amplifier, causing tube overheating

and
destruction. However, I dispelled this misconception in the above

mentioned
publications, using wave-mechanics treatment, discussed here in greater
detail, by showing that when the pi-network tank is tuned to resonance, a
virtual short circuit to rearward traveling waves is created at the input

of
the network. Consequently, instead of the reflected power reaching the
tubes of the amplifier, it is totally re-reflected toward the load by the
virtual short circuit appearing only to waves at the network input".
I'm guessing it's a virtual short because the pi-network is resonant but
what happens if it is a bit off. Also what happens in a transistor final
with no pi?

73 Hank WD5JFR

Henry,
Here is an example of what you just said. Take a sine wave source, and
connect it to a 1/4 wave section of shorted transmission line through a
series resistor R. The reflected wave will reach this resistor 1/2 cycle
later, and will be in phase with the source. For a lossless transmission
line, there will be *0 Volts across the resistor*. There will be 0 current
through the resistor, and the reflected wave will be re reflected for all
values of R, including R=Z0, because the reflected wave will not "know" what
R is. You can get the same answer from knowing that the impedance looking
into a 1/4 wave section of shorted transmission line is infinite.

Tam/WB2TT