In a 231 line posting that contains only original 57 lines:
On Thu, 13 Dec 2007 17:26:17 -0800, Roger wrote:
Hi Roger,
This last round has piqued my interest when we dipped into DC. Those
"formulas" would lead us to a DC wave velocity?
Hi Richard,
Here are two links to pages that cover the derivation of the formula Zo
= 1/cC and much more.
http://www.speedingedge.com/PDF-File..._Impedance.pdf
http://www.ece.uci.edu/docs/hspice/h...001_2-269.html
Here is the way I proposed to Kevin Schmidt nearly seven years ago after
seeing him use the formula on a web page:
Hi Roger,
However, none of what you respond with actually gives a DC wave
velocity. At a stretch, it is a transient with the potential of an
infinite number of waves (which could suffer dispersion from the
line's frequency characteristics making for an infinite number of
velocities). The infinite is a trivial observation in the scheme of
things when we return to DC.
Attaching a battery casts it into a role of AC generation (for however
long the transmission line takes to settle to an irresolvable
ringing). Discarding the term DC returns us to conventional
transmission line mechanics.
DC, in and of itself, has no wave velocity.
HTML enhanced text didn't help either. Some may shrug this off, but
browsers are the vectors of internet virii.
73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC