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Old June 4th 09, 08:18 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Richard Clark Richard Clark is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,951
Default Using Tuner to Determine Line Input Impedance

On Thu, 04 Jun 2009 11:47:31 -0700, Jim Lux
wrote:

By the way, the assumption that the run of the mill ham rig has a 50 ohm
resistive output impedance is not necessarily valid.


By the way, this comment above is another assumption in that it lacks
a quantifiable. I find it offered quite often as a negative assertion
to which the several many posters who offer them never provide an
actual value to prove what the run of the mill ham rig is, much less
is "not." Rarer, indeed, is any effort put forward by those posters
to show they have attempted to quantify their own equipment.

As there are posters here who have performed this work, shown their
data, and such data follows conventional design considerations (which
is easily revealed within the page cited at http://www.wy2u.com/);
then these assumptions dressed in denial are rather unprofound proofs.
As this topic has been visited many times, and as it quickly descends
into equally unsupported claims (although often annotated with vague
references and citations that are quickly demolished); I doubt
anything said here is going to sway those assumptions.

As an amusing exercise (I anticipate none will tread down this path),
the page at http://www.wy2u.com/ offers a means to test your own rig's
Source Z - if, in fact, you can cope with translating your tuner's
settings into picofarads and nanohenries, and if you can obtain a
known mismatch. These impediments are Herculean to most,
unfortunately.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC