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Owen Duffy wrote in
: .... I think the ARRL graph is based on a well known, but apparently not well understood formula. The only text book that I can recall spelling out the assumptions that underly the integral that produces the formula is Philip Smith's 'The Electronic Applications of the Smith Chart'. The formula is developed by integrating I^2 over an electrical half wave of line on one side or the other from the observation point, according to PS. (I don't know the origin of the formula, I am not suggesting that PS invented it, not that he didn't.) Straight away, that tells you that the VSWR must be almost the same at both ends for it to not matter which end is the observation point, so therefore the first assumption is that VSWR is approximately equal at both ends of the half wave. A requirement for this is that line loss must be relatively low, that the exponential real term in the transmission line equations is close to zero. If the line section is not exactly a half wave, then the real loss factor might be higher or lower depending on the location of the current and voltage maxima and minima and the relative contribution of R and G to loss. So, the formula may have significant error for short lines that are not exactly a half wave. For a line that is many half waves, the formula is fine so long as VSWR is approximately constant (now a very low loss line). If the line is longer than many half waves, but not an exact integral number of half waves, then the error in the partial section will be somewhat diminished relatively by the loss in the complete half wave sections. If a practical line is very long, it cannot qualify as having a constant VSWR (unless it is 1, in which case the formula is unnecessary), so the formula is not suited. So, in summary, the formula is good for low loss half wave lines, or even longish random length low loss lines, but not good for short random length lines or very long lines. So, why is the formula so popular? Could it be that it underpins one of the popular myths of ham radio, that VSWR necessarily increases line loss? Modern computation tools are better than the 70 year old graphical method. Publication of the formula without qualification with the underlying assumptions treats the reader as a dummy. Owen |
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