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On Wed, 13 Dec 2006 11:47:17 -0800, Richard Clark
wrote: .... There is no either/or offered in the first place. Your mistake of feed point relationships has overlooked the "third" wire of the seemingly two wire load. That "third" wire (the coax shield) runs in very close proximity to the car body for as great a distance as any capacitor lead described above. This shield/body relationship offers vastly more capacitance than any mount. The "third wire" (being the current flowing on the outside of outer conductor of the coax) is more properly a transmission line itself, possibly a leaky (ie radiating) transmission line. For example, were you to place a magmount on a large metal ground plane (that is a sheet, not wires), and lay the coax straight from a magmount to the source whose ground terminal is bonded to that ground plane, the effect of the coax will depend on the electrical length formed by the outside of the shield of the coax and the ground plane. Consider the effects of the transmission line so formed were it an electrical quarter wave, and an electrical half wave (taking into account any bulk shunt capacitance at the magmount due to the mount itself.. Who knows what happens in actual magmount installations? They truly fall into the category of "works" on lower frequencies, whatever "works" means to the individual. Owen .... -- |
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