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dykesc wrote in
ups.com: On May 10, 4:14 pm, Owen Duffy wrote: Owen Duffy wrote : What have you done to make the 259B appear as an isolated impedance meter? I did mean to add that in this case, the impedance at the end of the isolated feed line is not necessarily (and not likely to be) the same as when it is connected to your transmitter. Again the same issue arises about the path to ground for common mode current, and the influence that has on the antenna feed point impedance transformed by the transmission line. You need to think about the purpose of the measurement. Owen One more question Owen. If I measure the complex impedance on the low side of a 4:1 current balun. Is the impedance on the high side simply 4 times the low side? Can I just multiply the resistive term by 4 and the complex term by 4? If the balun was ideal, you could do that. To the extent that it isn't, error will be introduced. I think some of this comes back to the question "what do you want to know". If you want to know the load as connected to your transmitter, simulate that connection including baluns, earth connections etc. If you want to make an isolated measurement for some reason, I would have expected that the 259B on batteries at low HF frequencies and supported clear of other objects would be sufficiently isolated to not get the differences you observed. My suspicion is that if you follow the calculation path you described, the inherent range / accuracy of the 259B will be a problem, and the precision introduced by the measurement approach will be lost due to instrument error, indeed you might be worse off. Owen |
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