the bends
In article ,
"Dave" wrote:
oh, and don't forget.. individual electrons are oscillating back and forth
at the frequency of the rf, they aren't moving in one direction very far
before they reverse direction anyway.
"Dave" wrote in message
. ..
the only effect you will notice is if the bend is tight enough to move the
conductors enough to change the characteristic impedance. electrons are
moving so slowly compared to the fields that their individual energy is
not affected by physical conditions of the coax in any way that you or I
will ever measure.
"ml" wrote in message
...
hi
just wondering how much and how to calculate the loss in some common
coax for ex lmr400 over a given bend
naturally i mean not to exceed it's bend radius spec
but i figure electrons want to stay in motion and 'prefer' to go
straight so if i make a bend some of that energy i recon will be lost
a 90 degree bend is within spec for the above and i wonder how much i
loose
i know some of my variables lmr400 90bend and for ex 20m and 70cm
thanks
ahh ok thanks guys, i don't know why i was looking at an electron and
thought it wanted to keep going in same direction (objects want to keep
going ...) so i thought that a bend wouldn't have made the electron
'want' to change direction
but i followed what you spoke of, i was thinking more volts and
forgot about rf still made me ponder
but all clear now
thanks again and HAPPY HOLIDAYS !!
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