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Old March 18th 10, 05:37 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Jim Lux Jim Lux is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Mar 2007
Posts: 801
Default Lossy Coax: how is energy lost ?

Roy Lewallen wrote:
K7ITM wrote:

(Excellent summary and explanations!)

. . .


-- Copper loss (I^2*R loss) goes down as the impedance of the line
increases. Loss in dB/unit length is inversely proportional to
the impedance.


What a lot of people miss is that this is the real reason open wire line
is less lossy than coax -- it inherently has higher characteristic
impedance than coax because of its geometry. (The I^2*R loss is lower
for high impedance lines because I is lower for a given power level.)

But dielectric loss can be significant with twinlead. Water is lossy and
has a very high dielectric constant, so wet ladder line or TV twinlead
can actually have greater loss than moderate size coax.

. . .


Roy Lewallen, W7EL

From
http://www.k6mhe.com/n7ws/

http://www.k6mhe.com/n7ws/Ladder_Line.pdf talks about measurements on
wet and dry ladderline
http://www.k6mhe.com/n7ws/LadderLineUpdate.PDF