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On Jun 18, 7:00*pm, Keith Dysart wrote:
Reflected waves heat finals, no they don't, yes they do, ... but eventually I learned. Hopefully, you learned that rail arguments are rarely valid and the truth usually lies somewhere in between. Sometimes reflected waves heat finals and sometimes they don't. It all depends on what kind and how much interference exists between the forward wave and reflected wave at the source impedance and (apparently) how much of that impedance is dissipative or non-dissipative. Roy's food-for-thought article doesn't take interference into account at all and therefore arrives at magic conclusions divorced from reality. Anyhow, I suggest you read my examples and find the flaws, for that is the surest way to convince me that I am wrong. I have pointed out many of the flaws in your examples. The way you parse the energy violates the laws of physics. Maxwell's equations only work on a function that contains classic EM traveling waves. Standing waves and DC steady-state examples don't meet the necessary boundary conditions. In fact, it can be proved that EM waves do not existent during DC steady-state. The fact that an instrument designed to detect EM waves malfunctions during DC steady-state is not unexpected. Even an SWR meter calibrated for a different Z0 than the one being used will indicate false results. You really need to learn to recognize when your experiment and your math model are contradictory, when your concepts violate the laws of physics, and when you have chosen the wrong measuring equipment. You remind me of myself when I was 14 years old and tried to measure the screen voltage on a vacuum tube using a Simpson multimeter. It wasn't anywhere near the voltage specified in the manual so I wasted my money by buying a new tube the next time my family made a trip to Houston. You would report those same measurement results as proof of a strange, magical happening. -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp.com |
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