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Old October 17th 03, 07:13 PM
Roy Lewallen
 
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Huh?

Humor me, in what way does that equation constitute proof? Where is the
source impedance in that equation?

An SWR meter will correctly indicate the SWR on a transmission line if
the transmission line connected to its output equals the design
impedance of the meter, regardless of the source impedance. If the
transmission line connected to its output doesn't equal the design
impedance of the meter, the meter won't correctly indicate the SWR on
the the transmission line, again regardless of the source impedance.

Why does this seem so complicated?

Roy Lewallen, W7EL

Reg Edwards wrote:
Source impedance DOES affect the amount of energy moving in and sloshing
around in a transmission line. It DOESN'T affect the ratio of forward to
reflected waves, and therefore DOESN'T affect the SWR.


===========================

But it DOES affect the indicated SWR and so the indicated SWR is incorrect.

It is the meter which is at fault ! It is designed to indicate correctly
only when the source is 50 ohms.

Here's the proof - Rho = (50-Zt) / (50+Zt) - which you may have seen
before.

SWR, of course, is calculated from Rho and the meter scale is calibrated
accordingly.

If the source is not what the meter expects then it gives the wrong answers.
And its faithful worshippers believe it!
---
Reg, G4FGQ