Uzytkownik "K1TTT" napisal w wiadomosci
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On Jun 25, 7:24 am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
See; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_(electricity)
" In electronic circuit theory, a "ground" is usually idealized as an
infinite source or sink for charge, which can absorb an unlimited amount
of
current without changing its potential."
"The use of the term ground (or earth) is so common in electrical and
electronics applications that circuits in portable electronic devices such
as cell phones and media players as well as circuits in vehicles such as
ships, aircraft, and spacecraft may be spoken of as having a "ground"
connection without any actual connection to the Earth. This is usually a
large conductor attached to one side of the power supply (such as the
"ground plane" on a printed circuit board) which serves as the common
return
path for current from many different components in the circuit."
" no static build up while transmitting " because your station has
ground.
S*
you are almost as much fun as art with his magical levitating
neutrinos.
I am as much fun like Tesla, the father of radio.
no, i have antennas that are isolated from ground. they are fed
through a capacitor that prevents the charge from flowing to ground
Your station produces asymetrical pulses. The all real waves are not
symmetrical. The insulator in the capacitor is a poor conductor but its
surface is large.
It CONDUCTS because the pulses are not symmetrical.
and they do not get charged over time.
They must: " In electronic circuit theory, a "ground" is usually idealized
as an
infinite source or sink for charge, which can absorb an unlimited amount of
current without changing its potential."
The electronic circuit theory is the ruler in your station. Not EM.
i know this because when a
thunderstorm is nearby they build up enough charge to arc over the
capacitor. if there was charge being constantly emitted when they are
transmitting the capacitor would arc all the time.
Your capacitor is fit to transmitting not for lightnings.
S*