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"Ed_G" wrote in
. 192.196: That's because I added that to the mix. Bruce's comment was a Ok, well here is a model to shape your thinking and moving the goal posts. At frequencies where skin effect is fully developed, and that is a reasonable assumption for most practical coaxial cables at HF, the current on the inside surfaace of the outer conductor is equal to but opposite in direction to the current on the outside surface of the inner conductor. This is TEM mode propagation. At the end of the isolated outer conductor, this current must flow somewhere, and it flows around the end onto the outside surface of the outer conductor (effectively changing direction as it does so). So, at that point, the current flowing on the outside of the outer conductor is exactly equal to the current flowing on the outside of the inner conductor. Leaving aside the effects of changing Zo by substitution of coax for plain conductors: If you use two coax lines in parallel with the shields isolated, it makes very little difference, the current that would have flowed on the two plain conductors now flows on the outer of the coax lines. The common mode current is the sum of the currents in both coax shields, as it would be for plain conductors. If you join the shields together at each end, the sheilds together now carry the common mode current. A different equivalent circuit, but almost the same outcome. Most of these 'shielded solutions' arise from a lack of understanding of how the coaxial transmission line works in TEM mode. For example, I saw an ham advise someone that station ground connections were subject to noise pickup and the best improvement he could make was to shield the ground lead. In his case, his shack was on the first floor of the building, and his 7m vertical ground lead to the earth stakes etc was a source of noise, so he used 7m of RG213 with the shield and inner bonded to the earth stake and the shield left isolated at the top end. Firstly, this is not a 'shield' at radio frequencies, but what he did achieve was to insert a s/c stub in series with his station ground conductor. The impedance of that series stub at 7.1MHz is 3056.20- j1509.30 ohms... not a good outcome. It might have 'fixed' his RF feeback problem, but it didn't improve the station earth at all, it degraded it severely. Owen |
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