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Jeff Liebermann wrote:
. . . I'm partial to seat-of-the-pants testing for RF loss using a microwave oven. In general, if it gets hot in a microwave oven, it's going to be lossy. . . If it gets hot in a microwave oven, it's going to be lossy at 2.4 GHz, but it isn't necessarily going to be lossy at HF or even VHF. However, if it *doesn't* get hot in a microwave oven, it's probably pretty low loss at any frequency up to 2.4 GHz. There is, of course, a problem with reducing loss to a binary quantity of "lossy" or "not lossy". A relatively high amount of loss can easily be tolerated at points of low electric field strength, such as an insulator at the feedpoint of a half wavelength dipole. On the other hand, you need very low loss for some other applications like potting high Q inductors or for feedline insulators when the feedline has a very high SWR. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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