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Antonio Vernucci wrote:
Hi Walt, I have always used a good balun on all my antennas, and therefore I am not too convinced that, in my case, the SWR change I observe when adding (or removing) a piece of coax in my station could be due to RF presence on the coax braid. Anyway, I have not yet read a clear and convincing explanation of why the presence of RF on the coax braid would cause the SWR meter to give a different reading when moving it along the line. I appreciate that, with a hot braid, the coax cable becomes part of the antenna and then radiates, but I cannot clearly focus why this can cause the SWR meter to see different impedances at different points of the line. Impedance is the ratio between RF voltage (between center conductor and braid) and (differential mode) RF current. So, I do not well visualize how the presence of a common mode RF current can influence the meter reading. 73 Tony I0JX If you keep the same total line length and move your meter to different points along the line, current on the outside of the line won't change the indicated SWR except to the extent that the SWR meter is poorly shielded and affected by the current. However, I believe the problem was stated in such a way that the SWR was seen to change as line was added or removed, that is, as the line length changed. And that could change the actual line SWR for the reason you described. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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