Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Roger Sparks" wrote in
: "Keith Dysart" wrote in message . .. text cut..... The directional ammeter measures instantaneous Vt and It, does the above arithmetic and presents If. A directional ammeter that presents a single number rather than the time varying If has probably converted the instantaneous values to RMS. text cut...... ...Keith I don't think that the directional ammeter reads instantaneous Vt and It. The circuits I am thinking of sample a length of line (NOT A POINT) so the sample records average voltage (or current) from a period of time. Many simple reflectometer designs do indeed sample the line over a short length of line, and that short length may be 100mm or more. Ideally, they would take the sample at a point. (Since a point has zero length, I can't quickly think of a sampling technique that truly takes a point sample.) Although sampling over a non-zero length limits their accuracy somewhat, if that length is kept sufficiently short, they are still able to provide sufficiently accurate measurements. Owen |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|