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Old November 3rd 03, 08:20 PM
Roy Lewallen
 
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So, was that a yes or a no? I have trouble with your accent.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL

Cecil Moore wrote:
Roy Lewallen wrote:

Tell us, Cecil, at steady state at one frequency, can a lumped
inductor (presumably like the experimenter's toroid) tell whether it's
at the base of an antenna or simply in series between a generator and
load impedance?



This question proves you don't understand the problem. The inductor
cannot tell if it is installed in an antenna or transmission line.

So I will turn the question around: Does a standing wave antenna
have standing waves? Reference _Antenna_Theory- by Balanis, page 17,
section 1.4 Current Distrubution on a Thin Wire Antenna. Is Balanis
correct when he says: "If the diameter of each wire is very small,
the ideal standing wave pattern of the current along the arms of
the (1/2WL) dipole is sinusoidal with a null at the end."

This is after he takes an unterminated transmission line, discusses
standing waves, and then slowly opens up the ends of the transmission
line to create a 1/2WL dipole.

I took Balanis' antenna course at ASU in 1995. I asked a lot of
questions about inductively loaded antennas. The current and
standing wave pattern on each side of a loading coil is NOT the same.