| Home | 
| Search | 
| Today's Posts | 
| 
		 
			 
			#4  
			
			
			 
		
	   
			
			
		 | 
|||
		
		
  | 
|||
| 
		
	
		
		
			
			 
			
			Richard Harrison wrote: 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	A Bird senses all it has to sense and legitimately converts it to a reasonable indication of watts. The Bird can do so thanks to Ohm`s law, and that`s that. Let's approach it a little differently. Assume a signal generator equipped with a circulator load driving a lossless 50 ohm feedline. The load is variable. 100W SGCL----50 ohm lossless coax--------variable load Are there any locations up and down the line and/or any value of load that will cause the Bird wattmeter not to read 100 watts forward power? In the above example, I can show that the two voltages that get added inside the Bird always yield a constant value of voltage, i.e. and therefore a constant power indication. -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP  | 
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread | 
| Display Modes | |
		
  | 
	
		 | 
			 
			Similar Threads
		 | 
	||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| Cecil's Math a Blunder? | Antenna | |||