Reg Edwards wrote:
- or even more vague - an assumed 50-ohm environment?
Or an evironment of any other impedance.
The transmission line reflection model tells us that the Z0
of a transmission lines forces the following relationship.
Vfor/Ifor = Vref/Iref = Z0
A "50 ohm environment" used in the context of the previous
discussion would be one in which the above relationship
is forced on the system at certain points in the system.
600 ohm transmission line going from a tuner/balun to an
antenna establishes a 600 ohm environment for the signals
on the transmission line. An SWR meter calibrated for 600
ohms will indicate the actual SWR.
About a year ago, based on a discussion that you and I were
having, I asked the sci.physics.electromag newsgroup how
long a piece of RG-213 coax has to be to establish the
above relationship. The answer was that the non-TEM product
terms decrease at about 1/e every two inches for RG-213.
The RG-400 coax leads going to and from my SWR meter are
two feet each. So I asserted to you that my SWR meter
was reading the actual SWR in the middle of that run of
RG-400. I think you disagreed with my assertion but I
cannot remember for sure.
--
73, Cecil
http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp