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Old December 19th 14, 04:14 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Jerry Stuckle Jerry Stuckle is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Oct 2012
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Default swr goes up on antenna

On 12/19/2014 2:33 AM, Jeff wrote:
By changing
the length of the coax you can make the antenna appear as being resonant
or non resonant, even though the antenna may or may not be a perfect 50
ohm load.


Incorrect, changing the length of the feeder will not change the SWR
beyond any extra loss in the cable. It will change the phase of the
mismatch that is all; (rotate around a constant VSWR circle on a Smith
Chart).

Jeff


Incorrect. The basic VSWR meter measures the voltage, not the power.
And if the SWR is other than 1:1, this voltage will change depending on
the distance to the mismatch.

Additionally, a shorted coax 1/2 wavelength long shows a short (0 ohms).
But a shorted 1/4 wavelength coax shows an open (infinite impedance).
Somewhere in between (I'm not going to bother to figure out exactly
where because it's not that important) it will show an effective 50 ohm
impedance.

Coax length is unimportant when you have a 1:1 SWR, but if you don't,
the coax will act as a matching network. And length will affect the
overall system.

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