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Keith Dysart wrote:
So sometimes a 600 to 100 ohm discontinuity produces a 36.6 degree phase shift and sometimes it produces a 22.7 degree phase shift (and probably any value in between). Yes, of course - nobody said the phase shift wasn't a variable. Why would you expect it to be a constant? It is a variable that depends upon the phase of the component forward and reflected waves. I suggest that "work[ing] up the phasor diagrams of the component voltages (or currents) at the junction where rho = (600-100)/(600+100) = 0.7143" will not be useful for predicting the phase shift. It will be useful for reporting that particular phase shift. If other conditions change, that phase shift will change. What is unexpected about that? -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
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