Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#32
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ian Jackson wrote in
news ![]() That is indeed very interesting - and illuminating. I've always assumed that, for electrically long feeders, most of the power got lost at the input end - but I didn't realise that the effect was so dramatic. I must do a few calculations for myself! I chose a case that would be clear. When the line loss is low, it is not so dramatic. Trying to find Rules of Thumb in all of this is fraught with problems. And as for electrically short feeders, I do see how the greatest power loss is where there are current nodes etc (although, presumably, averaged over a halfwavelength, the power loss will still be greater towards the TX end). But I now recall that some time ago, there was a lengthy discussion (in this NG, I'm sure) about how a matched low-impedance feeder could actually have more loss than a mismatched relatively high-impedance feeder. Well, if you do some calcs yourself, what you learn will stick in your mind. Just be sure that your study is reasonably comprehensive so you don't come away with some new, but flawed, Rules of Thumb (RoT). You could persue the dummy load example a little further. How long does the line need to be for VSWR1.1, and if the continuous dissipation limit of RG58 is say 6W/m, what is the continuous power rating? Owen |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
AM-loop versus whip antennas | Shortwave | |||
Vertical Whip Antennas And Gain Question ? | Antenna | |||
source for replacement whip antennas? | Shortwave | |||
Super-whippy whip antennas | Homebrew | |||
Super-whippy whip antennas | Homebrew |