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On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 21:12:23 GMT, Walter Maxwell wrote:
My first publication of this issue appeared in QST, October 1973, entitled, "A View Into the Conjugate Mirror." This article appears in both Eds 1 and 2 of Reflections as Chapter 4, Steve also copied from another of my articles, this one in QEX,, Mar/Apr 1998, entitled "Examining the Mechanics of Wave Interference in Impedance Matching," which also appears in Reflections 2 as Chapter 23. Steve and I have been in contentious controversy on this subject for several years. He continued this controversy by publishing this totally erroneous material in QEX,, erroneous except for the portion in the single column where he presented my material correctly. The remaining portion of his article is simply an unsuccessful attempt to show that my position is incorrect, and therefore calls it a 'fallacy'. In fact, however, the entire portion following the correct portion he copied from me is where the REAL fallacy lies--it proves that he knows very little about the subject of his title, "Wave Mechanics of Transmission Lnes." It also shows he doesn't have a clue concerning the superposition of two rearward traveling waves that are conjugately related at the matching point. In fact, the two waves cancel each other, and establish either a one-way open circuit or a one-way short circuit that totally re-reflects the reflected power, with its voltage and current components traveling in the same phase as t;hose from the source, and therefore adding to the source power. I know that many on this thread believe that no open or short circuit can be established by the superposition of waves. It is true that forward and reflected waves, traveling in OPPOSITE directions establish only the standing wave--no open or short circuits. But it's a different ball game when two waves traveling in the SAME direction are conjugately related. The waves are conjugately related because the canceling wave generated by the matching device is tailored to have the same magnitude but opposite phase as the wave reflected from the mismatched load on the transmission line. Here's why a short or open circuit is established when conjugately related waves join at a matching point. From an analytic viewpoint the voltage appearing at any point on the line can be replaced with a generator delivering the same voltage at the same phase that appears at that point. This generator is called a 'point' generator that delivers an impedance-less EMF. Now consider one generator delivering the voltage appearing in the wave reflected at the mismatched load and a second generator delivering the voltage from the canceling wave reflected by a matching stub, or whatever the matching device, at the same point on the line as the first. The voltage from this second generator has the same magnitude, but opposite phase from that of the first generator. When the voltages delivered by the t wo generators are 180 degrees out of phase we have a short circuit--if they're in phase we have an open circuit. As the result, in either of these two conditions no reflected wave can pass rearward of the matching point. From the simple fact that the impedance at the input of an antenna tuner is 50+ j0 we know that no reflected power is traveling rearward further than the tuner input. Where did the power in the reflected wave go? That energy cannot disappear as if by some sort of magic--it is totally re-reflected by the open or short circuit, and adds to the source power to establish a forward power equal to the sum of the source and reflected power. I hope this helps to end the confusion, and also gives Cecil what he deserves for his attempt to give you guys the straight dope. Walt, W2DU This is a post script to go along with the above discussion. Sorry, Guys, I forgot to mention that for those of you who don't have access to my QEX article, or Chapter 23 in Reflections, Chapter 23 appears in PDF form for downloading from my web page at http://home.iag.net/~w2du. I would also like to add that from the first QST article I published on this subject in 1973, and the QEX article in 1998, I have received more than one hundred responses from RF engineers saying that my explanation of impedance matching via wave mechanics gave them the first real understanding of how the impedance matching process works. No one, other than Steve Best, has disputed my explantion. If the more than one hundred responses seems exaggerated please take a look at the hit count on my web page. At this time the hit count reads 19,927, and I've had NO responses disputing any of the material presented there. So who do you want to believe? Steve Best or me? Walt, W2DU |
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