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On Fri, 28 May 2010 19:09:04 -0700 (PDT), walt wrote:
Richard, I'm still trying to assimilate all the info you presented in you post above. So please allow me to skate around a bit. First, concerning plate resistance, Rp. This may be where we don't understand each other. My position on Rp is that it is a non- dissipative resistance, and can be measured by noting the change in Ip with a change in ep with grid voltage held constant. Hi Walt, Thank you for the restrained answer. Yes, we do not agree here. To the matter of the conjugate basis. Terman quite distinctly gives us a real R that remains after the cancellation of reactances. As a hallmark of first principles, it is very clear and concise. The source R must match the load R for the source to deliver the maximum available power. By the same hallmark, this too is very explicit. Terman calls this R (the remnant of conjugation) in the source: "the resistance component of the generator impedance." For you and others to say what the source is "not," that is not a solution for what the source "is." This is what I speak of when you ask if your critics agree or disagree. You stand with your critics against the testimony of your data that stands with Terman. The plate resistance can be described physically to suit any objection that I have so far heard from the community. It suits very few who embrace thought experiments that have never warmed a bench nor flickered a measurement instrument. The collapse of rhetoric has exposed the vacuum of counter argument. However, I will say this, I appreciate your statement that my data suits you fine. Walt, your methods are first methods. Your care for propriety exceeds all bold statements that carelessly condemn you. Your achievements give you the status of not having to endure taunts and endless bickering. Your steadfast self examination and willingness to sit at the bench is the rock of faith in what Hams aspire for in engineering. As for your humanity, I find you a proud father and loving husband. I think of you in no other terms, even when my prose is dense or obtuse, and my engineering demands are harsh and pointed. If my allusions to Kabuki are obscure, it is through my upbringing living in Japan as a tyke. If I might balance that obscure reference for one that is more to my tone here, I call you Sensei - a master of learning and teaching. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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