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Old July 2nd 15, 07:55 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 An antenna question--43 ft vertical

On 7/2/2015 1:56 PM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
"Jerry Stuckle" wrote in message
...

Try this - connect the output of an HF transmitter to an SWR bridge.
Now connect a piece of 75 ohm coax such as RG-59 to the output of the
SWR meter, and connect that to a 75 ohm resistive load. Do you think
the SWR bridge will show a 1:1 SWR? Not a chance. It will be 1.5:1.



What you have described is a case of using the wrong swr bridge. You are
trying to use a 50 ohm bridge on a 75 ohm system. If a 75 ohm bridge is
used it will show a 1:1 SWR.

The real SWR is 1:1. With a 75 ohm line and 75 ohm load there is no
reflected power.



No, the SWR bridge is correct. The output of the transmitter is 50 ohms.

You are correct in that if a 75 ohm bridge is used, the indicated SWR
would be 1:1, because everything from that point on is 75 ohms.
However, the mismatch (and reflection) occurs on the transmitter side of
the bridge, not the antenna side. So the bridge will never see it. But
an accurate bridge will show lower power output due to the mismatch.

A mismatch is a mismatch, no matter where in the system it occurs. And
any mismatch will cause less than 100% power to be transferred. The
rest is reflected.

Just look at the specs of any amateur transceiver. They show an
impedance of 50 ohms. So a load of 50 ohms provides for maximum power
transfer; any other impedance causes a mismatch.

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