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Ralph Mowery wrote:
"Sal M. Onella" wrote in message ... This group has presented members with valuable lessons in antennas and transmission lines, like how to measure, how to match, etc. Something I haven't seen is a discussion of the source impedance of the transmitter. My curiosity was piqued today as I took some baby steps into EZNEC. A particular antenna had such-and-such VSWR if fed with a 50-ohm cable and a different value if fed with a 75-ohm cable. While this is hardly news, it got me wondering whether a 75-ohm cable will load the transmitter the same. Doesn't seem like it. My point: Using 75-ohm cable to improve the match at the antenna won't help me ... IF ... I suffer a corresponding loss due to mismatch at the back of the radio. My HF radios, all solid state, specify a 50 ohm load. As necessary, I routinely use an internal autotuner and either of two external manual tuners. (I'm aware of the published 1/12 wavelength matching method.) Wisdom in any form would be appreciated. Thanks. "Sal" (KD6VKW) A transmitter output impedance is designed for maximum power transfer at a specific impedance. Most of the the older tube transmitters impedance was tunable within a range. In simple terms the impedance of the transmitter tube is the plate voltage devided by the current. This impedance is then transformed to the nominal 50 ohms of the antenna system. If the transmitter has the usual tune and load controls, the exect impedance will not mater as you adjust for maximum transmitter output. Most of the transistor transmitters are not adjustable so the output impedance is usually fixed at 50 ohms for maximum power transfer. If the impedance of the antenna system is not 50 ohms, then the output power will be less than the designed output. You can use the antenna tuner to adjust for a match. Not exactly.. A "match" provides the optimum power transfer from generator to load, but that is NOT the maximum load power, nor is it either the maximum or minimum power dissipated in the source. Say I have a zero output impedance on my source and I'm putting out 7 Volts RMS into a 50 ohm load. That's about 1 watt into the load. Now.. if I reduce the load impedance to 25 ohms, and since I've got zero output impedance, I'm now putting out 2 Watts. The source impedance is zero, so I'm not dissipating any extra power in the source, either. It is true that a "matched load" to my zero ohm source would, in fact, be zero ohms, and would have infinite power. Any other load impedance would have less power into the load, so the Thevenin theorem is satisfied. Now.. if my generator had a fixed output impedance, it's true that the load impedance that will get the most power out is the conjugate of the output Z. For resistive sources/loads, here's an example.. You also have to be careful about looking at Thevenin equivalent sources (e.g. a ideal voltage in series with a Z, or a ideal current in parallel with a Z), because just because *the model* has a resistor in series does NOT mean that you're actually dissipating any power in the source. (If I had a very efficient op amp, I could simulate any arbitrary output impedance, without dissipating any power in the source) Say my generator is 40 ohms, and I'm putting out 7 Volts into a 40 ohm load. OK, that means that the imaginary voltage source is putting out 14 V. I'm getting about 1.23 Watts into my load. Now, if I decrease my load Z to 20 ohms, what do I get? Now, I have 4.67 (=14/3) Volts instead of 7, and I get 1.1 Watts. Yep, less.. Thevenin works. Let's try increasing the Z to 60 ohms.. Now the voltage on my load is 8.4 V, and I'm dissipating 1.18W, again, less than my 1.23. But here's some weird stuff.. let's look at how much power is dissipated in that imaginary resistor (i.e. our source *really is* a ideal voltage source in series with a resistor) At 40 ohm load, we've got 7 volts on the load and 7 volts across the resistor, so they both dissipate the same 1.225 Watts. Pload/Pgen = 1 In the 20 ohm load case, we've got 1.1 dissipated in the load and 2.2 dissipated in the generator. Pload/Pgen = 0.5 In the 60 ohm load case, we've got 1.18 dissipated in the load, and 0.78 dissipated in the generator. Pload/Pgen = 1.5 (i.e. we dissipate more in the load than in the generator... how about that!) And let's look at "efficiency" of the system (assuming that the total power in is the sum of what's dissipated in the generator and the load) 20 ohm load, 33% 40 ohm load, 50% (what you'd expect) 60 ohm load, 60% (hey.. it's more efficient, too) - take home message... a "good match" is sort of an artificial thing from a power transfer standpoint.. it depends on what you're trying to optimize for. - Where you get bitten is when "match" varies with frequency... now, all of a sudden, you have a system that has a response that varies with frequency, which is generally undesirable. When you get up into the microwave region, where a transmission line is often many wavelengths long, that mismatch can result in remarkably wild fluctuations in gain with respect to frequency. |
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