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Richard Clark wrote in
: On Thu, 01 Mar 2007 19:21:43 GMT, Owen Duffy wrote: If you are asserting that VSWR on a real or even theoretical line varies sinudoidally with displacement, it is time to go back to basics. You need some time with a reputable text book. Hi Owen, Under the right circumstances (and they have been presumed in some discussion here), then the power terms (as expressed by a power meter inserted into the line) will vary sinusoidally with displacement, even if the SWR does not. Richard, I am not sure of what you mean by the "right circumstances". Firstly, except in the very special case of an almost purely inductive load on a lossy cable at low frequencies, the VSWR calculated from Vf and Vr at a point on a line, decreases smoothly from the load end to the source end. (Vf and Vr each decay exponentially in magnitude from source to load, and the forward and reflected power values calculated from those samples will vary as the square of the exponentially decaying Vf, Vr from load to source.) If you use an instrument that is calibrated for an impedance other than the line under test, your measurement does not indicate VSWR on the line under test, and the instrument readings will be different than I outlined in the previous paragraph. Fig 3 in my article at http://www.vk1od.net/VSWR/VSWRMeter.htm shows a line labelled "VSWR(50)" that indicates the values that would be indicated / calculated using a 50 ohm instrument in a 75 ohm cable with a 1.5:1 VSWR. Owen |
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