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![]() "Cecil Moore" wrote ... Here's a question for you: If the feedpoint impedance of a loaded standing-wave (mobile) antenna is purely resistive, how could the reflected wave arriving at the feedpoint have undergone anything except a 180 degree phase shift? There are the two possibilities: See: http://paws.kettering.edu/~drussell/...t/reflect.html 1.Reflection from a HARD boundary "at a fixed (hard) boundary, the displacement remains zero and the reflected wave changes its polarity (undergoes a 180o phase change) " 2. Reflection from a SOFT boundary " at a free (soft) boundary, the restoring force is zero and the reflected wave has the same polarity (no phase change) as the incident wave " So if the feedpoint is in distance 1/4 WL from the end you have 0 or 180 degree phase shift. Which case is in antennas? S* Why is the feedpoint impedance of a resonant short loaded antenna usually less than that of a 1/4WL antenna? Because the radiation resistance is lower and the I^2*R losses are lower. But all resonant shortened monopoles are 90 degrees in electrical length. Anyone arguing against that fact of physics is just ignorant of how standing- wave antennas work. That includes some otherwise knowledgeable "gurus", incapable of admitting a mortal mistake, who post to this newsgroup. -- 73, Cecil, w5dxp.com |
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