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Keith Dysart wrote:
Only partly. If you look at the element on an instrument like a Bird 43, you will find that it is both capacitively and inductively coupled to the line. The capactive coupling is sensitive to the total voltage on the line at the point of the element, while the inductive coupling is sensitive to the total current in the line. The subtraction (or addition) is done in the element where the voltage sample and the current sample (scaled by Z0) are subtracted before being applied to the diode. The output of the diode is the rectified instantaneous difference of the voltage and scaled current from the equations originally provided. This is fed to an average responding meter which has a scale marked to show (Vf**2)/Z0 (i.e. power). . . . Another common directional wattmeter circuit is the Bruene type circuit. This uses an ordinary current transformer to get the current sample and a direct connection for the voltage sample. The voltage sample is reduced to the correct proportional value via a transformer or capacitive voltage divider. It shouldn't be hard to find a diagram of one on the web. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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