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Richard Harrison wrote:
Cecil, W5DXP wrote: "I suapect they (reflections) are originating at the feedpoint, i.e. the forward wave travels all the way around the loop and is reflected from the impedance discontinuity at the feedpoint." That would be a reflection from a virtual impedance bump wouldn`t it? No, the impedance bump is physical. The physical Z0 of the feedline is no doubt different from the physical Z0 of the loop. The wave travels both wires of a feedline simultaneously, and enters both ends of the loop at the same time. The collision is at the midpoint of the loop opposite the feedpoint. Waves traveling in opposite directions in a constant Z0 environment don't interact. If the Z0 doesn't change, they pass each other "like ships in the night". Arnold B. Bailey says on page 399 of "TV and Other Receiving Antennas": "Now, in the loop, the far-end reflection point is a short circuit, and hence, the current is high at this far end." If there is no physical impedance discontinuity, there is no reflection. Reflections occur only at physical impedance discontinuities. That virtual short circuit is an effect, not a cause. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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