I know they work!   One of my reasons for asking the question is I've not
found any mention in the literature of where the
"attenuation/rejection/reflection/filter residue" goes.
--
73
Hank WD5JFR
"Dave"  wrote in message
...
 the harmonic is 'attenuated' in that the magnitude of it is reduced when
the
 stub is in line.  i look at it like you could replace the stub with a
lumped
 filter at the same point so the term attenuation makes more sense than
 reflections or rejections... i don't really care where the harmonic goes,
i
 want to know how much it is attenuated by so i can compare with other
types
 of filters.
 "Henry Kolesnik"  wrote in message
   m...
  Dave
 
  Nice site, I like the "white paper" approach as I prefer the info
without
  the glitter.   I've only read a few items and I
  quote: "This is a plot of the attenuation provided by the stub. You can
 see
  that it provides about 32db of attenuation at 28.25Mhz. "  I've noticed
 that
  the literature I've purused indicates that stubs either attenuate or
 reject.
  None say reflect!  I don't want to get into a discussion of word
 definitions
  becasue reflect and feject are close but attenuate is not in the same
 class.
  Comments...
 
  --
  73
  Hank WD5JFR
 
  "Dave"  wrote in message
  news
  
   "Henry Kolesnik"  wrote in message
     ...
    I know that a shorted 1/4 wave stub exhibits a  very high impedance.
  But
    for the 2nd harmonic it's a 1/2 wave stub and exhibits a very low
   impedance
    or a short. There are claims that this can be used to filter the
even
    harmonics.  Shorts can't diisipate power and must reflect,  so how
 does
  a
    stub work?
  
   stubs work very nicely.  you can get practical stub information at my
 web
   site, including how to build a 40m to 15m 3rd harmonic stub filter:
   http://www.k1ttt.net/technote/techref.html#filters
  
   as you may have noticed by now you have kicked the proverbial hornets
  nest.
   reflections are a touchy word in this group, usually attracting the
  endless
   argument that travels from thread to thread.  in time this will
  deteriorate
   into name calling and endless argument over reflections, interference,
   virtual impedances, and a few other topics.