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Old August 16th 04, 07:09 PM
Richard Clark
 
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On Mon, 16 Aug 2004 02:09:49 GMT, Jim - NN7K
wrote:

Perhaps was wrong on
initial assumption that swr was bi-directional, but doesn't negate the
original premise that the swr has no effect on recieve-- and, btw, will
the stacking actually provide THAT 3dB?? (before, or after the added 3:1
mismatch)?? Yours for comment?? Jim NN7K



Hi Jim,

My experience in the very short wavelengths is confined to RADAR. I
have not pursued satellite nor EME. RADAR comes with its own
compensations in that if you have one, you can afford to do it right
the first time (I pine for the day when the FCC allows Amateur RADAR
operation).

As for Transmit/Receive, they are so intimately wed, that it is
sometimes difficult to separate them and judge their needs on their
own merits. A Receiver doesn't need to have an input Z of 50 Ohms,
but given that the Receiver of a Transceiver shares the same path ways
of the transmitter, it is foolish to go a different direction. Why
would you put a 300 Ohm first RF stage after a filter designed for 50
Ohms? A 6:1 SWR from the get-go is simply stupid when you can do it
right with so little effort.

I've seen some discussion that it doesn't matter because front ends
only take voltage and need no current. This is a 0Hz analysis and at
10MHz is thoroughly dead in the water. Stray capacitance negates any
claims to an input being Hi-Z and the whole point of low Z inputs is
to swamp nature's capacity to send your signal straight to ground
before it sees that amplifier.

For the mild SWRs such as described by Jerry, most receivers have a
lot of head room (capacity) to amplify what makes its way in. The
only down-side is degrading S+N/N ratio for very small signals where
this capacity fails to make up for information loss.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC