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Old September 4th 06, 11:52 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Owen Duffy Owen Duffy is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 168
Default Dipole with standing wave - what happens to reflected wave?

On Mon, 4 Sep 2006 17:03:39 -0500, "Richard Fry"
wrote:

"Owen Duffy" wrote:
You talk of the "reflected wave" as if it has inertia, that it must
keep travelling when it reaches the junction of the feedline and the
antenna? You are not alone in speaking that way, but thinking that way
will get in the way of understanding what is happening. Next thing,
you will be thinking that the reflected wave must travel back to the
PA anode and will be absorbed there causing overheating.

_______

If you write of reflected power existing on the transmission line between
the tx output connector and the antenna input connector, then yes -- with
sufficient tx output power and a poor enough match at the antenna feedpoint,
that reflected power can cause transmission line and/or tx PA component
failure.


The mechanism is not "that the reflected wave must travel back to the
PA anode and will be absorbed there causing overheating".

Take an example of the 50 ohms load discussed, and an electrical half
wave of 70 ohm line connected to a transmitter designed for a 50 ohm
load. The transmitter behaves exactly as if that line were 50 ohms.
Though there is a reflected travelling wave on the line, it does not
travel back to the PA anode where it is absorbed and converted to
heat. At the tx end of the line, the forward and reflected wave
components resolve to a 50+j0 load, and the transmitter sees the same
50 ohm load as it would were 50 ohm line used. Increasing power or
increasing line Zo for a higher VSWR will not change the outcome of
this example.

Owen
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