Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Tom Donaly wrote:
O.K., Cecil, I finally figured out what you want to do. You want a zero ohm input impedance, just like a 1/4 wave open stub. In that case, you're absolutely right, the 600 ohm line should be 43.387 degrees long. If you call the 100 ohm line, line 1, and the 600 ohm line, line 2, then the criterion for what you want is: tan(Bl1)*tan(Bl2)= Z01/Z02. This behaves sort of like a backwards, transmission-line, Helmholtz resonator. I still don't know where you come up with the 90 degree stuff. For an open stub to exhibit a zero ohm input impedance, it must be electrically 90 degrees long (or 270 ...). That's where the 90 degrees comes from. The example stub is electrically 90 degrees long while being 53 degrees long physically. Good for you, Tom, now you have it - "just like a 1/4WL open stub" from 53 degrees of transmission line. Here's another tidbit for you. Using 600 ohm line and 100 ohms line, if you make the two sections equal length, the dual-Z0 stub will be very close to 1/2 the physical length of a single-Z0 stub, i.e. physically 45 degrees long for an electrical 1/4WL (90 deg) stub. On 75m, that cuts the 1/4 stub physical length from ~66 feet to ~33 feet, a much more manageable length. Here's a useful equation. For a 1/4WL stub with equal length sections, the physical length in degrees of each section is: ARCTAN[SQRT(Z0Low/Z0High)] -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Standing wave on feeders | Antenna | |||
Dipole with standing wave - what happens to reflected wave? | Antenna | |||
Standing Waves (and Impedance) | Antenna | |||
The Tower still standing ???? | Antenna | |||
Imaginary Standing Waves? | Antenna |