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Roy, W7EL wrote:
"A Bruene wattmeter circuit measures "forward power" and "reverse power" just fine simply by measuring the voltage at a single point on the line." So does the Bird Thruline Wattmeter., and it has been doing so for about half a century. It uses the fact that reflection reverses the phase between voltage and current on a 50-ohm coaxial line. That means forward waves can be separated from reflected (reverse) waves. Bird designs its measuring elements to extract a line voltage sample that causes the exact same meter deflection as does a line current sample. From a wave traveling in one direction the samples add. From the wave traveling in the opposite direction, the samples exactly cancel in the meter. Voila! a directional coupler. It was A14QJ who wrote: "The components of the superposition wave no longer exist by themselves;----". My reply was: "The components are not cancelled. Were that so, the Bird Thruline Wattmeter could not function and the standing wave would be independent of the forward and reflected waves. Instead it is only a manifestation of interference." I don`t have a Bruene wattmeter, but I believe it functions like a Bird but uses transformers to couple to the transmission line. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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