I disagree with this. When applied to transmission lines, the (voltage)
reflection coefficient is, as far as I can tell, universally defined as
the ratio of reflected to forward voltage to reverse voltage at a point.
So a reflection coefficient can be, and often is, calculated for every
point along a line, not just at discontinuities or points of actual
reflection.
This can be done with nothing more than the knowledge of the
values of forward and reflected voltages at the point of calculation.
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Sorry! Just to continue and further confuse the haggling, the forward
voltages are unknown because one does not know, in the case of amateur
systems, what is the internal voltage and internal impedance of the
transmitter.
It is this unknown voltage and internal impedance which the so-called SWR
(Rho) meter merely ASSUMES.
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