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31.6 is the sq. rt. of 1000, approximately. Power is proportional to the
sq.of volts or amps. So, if you want to represent watts as a function of transmission line volts and, or transmission line amps, you can print the scale of a linear meter so that it advances as the sq. rt. of the current. That is, current increases to 141.4% of its previous value, and the watts indication doubles. That`s because 1.414X the volts multiplied by 1.414X the amps equals 2X the watts. Richard, That is exactly what I was trying to say, one can measure the power absorbed by a known resistive load by sampling V or I, rectify, scale and display on a log scale meter, or is it square law? Whichever one it is, it ain't linear. 73 Gary N4AST |
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