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Cecil Moore wrote:
Jim Kelley wrote: Cecil Moore wrote: Of course, I regularly obtain 200 watts of forward power from my 100 watt IC-706. It's all due to constructive interference. Nice try, but you're kidding yourself if you think you're getting 200 watts out of an IC706. As anyone can readily see, I did NOT say I was "getting 200 watts out of my IC706" so your attempt at obfuscation is obvious. I said "I regularly obtain 200 watts of forward power from my 100 watt IC-706". Here is my exact configuration for my 33' rotatable dipole based on actual measurements on 20m. Then your observation was unrelated to the topic of discussion, which was your claim that 2 Joules per second could be obtained from a 1 watt laser. It must have been offered as a diversion. Heck, on 17m, I regularly obtain 350 watts of forward power using a 100W IC-706 as the source. It's certainly an impressive meter reading. It is your contention then that interference caused a 250 Joule per second increase in the amount of energy being produced by your radio? If not, then this must also have been offered as a diversion. Back to the laser example, the answer you can't seem to get right is that, recombing the split beam back into one beam will at best recover 1 watt of laser power. That's the limit allowed by conservation of energy as it happens. That's true for average power, Jim, and I have never said otherwise. You can't average power 'going' one direction with power 'going' in some other direction. That doesn't even make sense. If you integrate all of the energy, from all the bright fringes it still doesn't exceed the energy coming from the source. There is no amount of hand waving that can cause a one watt laser to deliver 2 Joules of energy per second. But if we observe interference rings, the bright rings can contain all the power while the dark rings contain none. Thus, the bright rings represent *double the average power* just as Born and Wolf report. Born and Wolf doesn't discuss power and interference, and they certainly don't interchange intensity and power in their discussions like you do. There can be no more 'power gain' along a transmission line than there can be along a beam of light. With respect to antennas one can obviously observe an increase in power in a particular direction given the fact that antennas do in fact redistribute energy by generating an interference pattern. But even with all the interference and power averaging taken into consideration, the radiated power will still not exceed the input power. You can't get 400 watts to a load using two 100 watt PA's no matter how much interfering and averaging you do, Cecil. How can you even make that claim with a straight face? Shirley, that is not beyond your comprehension. Quite honestly it does seem to be beyond yours. And please stop calling me Shirley. :-) 73, Jim AC6XG |
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