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Old July 5th 15, 03:41 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Jerry Stuckle Jerry Stuckle is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Oct 2012
Posts: 1,067
Default An antenna question--43 ft vertical

On 7/4/2015 7:55 PM, Wayne wrote:


"Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message
...

On Sat, 04 Jul 2015 19:04:01 -0400, Jerry Stuckle
wrote:
Think of it this way, without the math. On the transmitter side of the
network, the match is 1:1, with nothing reflected back to the
transmitter.

So you have a signal coming back from the antenna. You have a perfect
matching network, which means nothing is lost in the network. The
feedline is perfect, so there is no loss in it. The only place for the
signal to go is back to the antenna.


Wikipedia says that if the source is matched to the line, any
reflections that come back are absorbed, not reflected back to the
antenna:


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impedance_matching
"If the source impedance matches the line, reflections
from the load end will be absorbed at the source end.
If the transmission line is not matched at both ends
reflections from the load will be re-reflected at the
source and re-re-reflected at the load end ad infinitum,
losing energy on each transit of the transmission line."


Well, I looked at that section of the writeup.
And, I have no idea what the hell they are talking about.
Looks like a good section for a knowledgeable person to edit.


It's not clear because it depends on a lot of math on how things work.
Maybe it could use some editing, but I really don't think it can be
simplified much more - and certainly not enough for some idiots in this
newsgroup to understand.

But then they are just trolls who insist on showing their ignorance
based on a limited understanding of Ohm's law - and nothing higher.
Even the math behind Smith charts is beyond them.

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