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On Apr 9, 6:34 pm, Owen Duffy wrote:
Roy Lewallen wrote : Owen Duffy wrote: If in fact the power delivered by the "100 watt IC706" radio was indeed 100W, and some directional wattmeter correctly indicated 200W forward, it must indicate 200W-100W reflected which is indicative of a VSWR of 5.8, which should have reduced power output from the IC706 markedly. . . . Nah, no problem. Connect your rig through a half wavelength of 250 ohm ladder line to a 50 ohm load. Presto, 200 watts "forward power" and 5:1 SWR on the line, and the poor ignorant Icom doesn't have any hint that all those waves of power or energy or whatever are bouncing around on the line, trying desperately but unsuccessfully to overheat the final or whatever they're supposed to do. Of course, it would take a 250 ohm directional wattmeter to read that "forward power" or SWR. But we don' need no steenkin' meter -- we know it's there, don't we? Roy Lewallen, W7EL Roy, I was assuming that the instrument was a nominal 50 ohm instrument measuring conditions adjacent to the transmitter. Your workup is correct enough for the case you describe (though for Pf/Pref=2, VSWR=5.8). Of course, if you had a coaxial reflectometer calibrated (nulled) for 8.6 ohms or 290 ohms then you would get the same indications on a 50 ohm load, you don't actually need the 8.6 ohm or 290 ohm transmission line. These are just examples that question the reality of these "component powers" when you can change their magnitude by choosing the reference impedance for measurement or calculation. They reinforce the view that whilst Pf-Pr has meaning (irrespective of Z), Pf and Pr each alone have no meaning. Owen Hi Owen, (Noted your other response, to my posting, about the assumption of 50 ohm line. I obviously didn't make that assumption...) I've been harping in this forum for YEARS about the need to calibrate an SWR meter or a return loss bridge to the impedance you're wanting to use it for. I'm always somewhat amazed that some folk just "don't get it." Thanks for helping reinforce the need for the proper calibration. Those bridges are not magic; they can only measure voltages or currents produced by (hopefully) linear combinations of transduced line voltages and currents. I think it was about ten years ago in this group that I posted the derivation of the equations to determine forward and reflected from measurement of voltage and current at a point on a TEM line, IF you know the impedance of the line. Cheers, Tom |
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