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"Richard Clark" wrote
Tell me, please, this is the FIRST time you have read our master fence sitter (in the American historical context otherwise known as a Mugwump: someone who has his mug on one side of the fence and his wump on the other). ________________ No, which is the prime reason I chose to confront him. - RF |
On Mon, 17 May 2004 15:02:19 -0500, "Richard Fry"
wrote: "Reg Edwards" wrote No need to make measurements. If you are unable to make a simple calculation and answer the question then you are not qualified to continue the discussion. __________________ How convenient. Why _would_ you want to make measurements, and prove yourself wrong? Ah Richard! Confrontation? Feeble at best when I doubt you could even get his recipe for RF Mud. ;-) Poor Reggie can quote Dead White Scientists like Lord Kelvinator with high dudgeon and still ignore the tenet of the plagiarized message. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Reg Edwards wrote:
Richard, A radio amateur, by an easy mistake, uses a 75-ohm plug and socket in a 50-ohm coaxial transmission system. The total length of the plug plus socket is 1" As a result of the mismatch what is the SWR produced on the 50-ohm line at 2 MHz. At 30 MHz? At 150 MHz? Is the amateur, or anyone else, likely to be aware of any difference in performance? The practical answer for amateurs is somewhere between the two extreme positions that Richard and Reg are taking. Richard quotes a case where even very small impedance bumps do matter; but it's in full-quality TV broadcasting, not amateur radio. Reg, on the other hand, wants to dumb it down too far. There *are* cases in amateur radio where small impedance bumps are at least noticeable. At 2MHz or 30MHz, the effect is so small that no amateur would notice it. Even using professional test equipment, you'd be hard-pressed to measure the effect of a single connector of the wrong impedance. At 150(144)MHz, even a single connector is noticeable... but that's not the problem. The real problem is that if people believe a simple slogan like "connector impedances don't matter", they will probably go ahead and use *several* mismatched connectors, at various places along the line. Then they start to find bewildering problems at 144MHz and above, such as indicated SWR and power output values that vary according to the length of the coax jumpers that they use. It still may not matter in terms of the contacts they can make, but they are completely unable to understand what is happening - and that *does* matter! (What is happening, by the way, is that the lengths of the line sections between the mismatched connectors will determine how the small reflections from each one combine together. If you're lucky with the line lengths, they may tend to cancel; if you're not, they may tend to add... and usually it's somewhere in between.) No need to make measurements. In this particular case, that's true. When the impedance bump is small, it is easier and more accurate to calculate the effect than to measure it. -- 73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
Let's do what nobody has ever done before, not even in the ARRL handbooks or
in Terman, and get an idea of the magnitudes involved. Examine two cases over a range of frequencies. Case (1). In a 50-ohm system, use of a poor connector having an impedance deviating 10 percent from its nominal value of 50 ohms. Case (2). Making the mistake of using a 75-ohm connector in a 50-ohm system. In both cases the connector, plug and socket, is 1" (25.4mm) long. We first calculate the input impedance of a 75-ohm transmission line, 1" long, terminated with 50 ohms. Zin will not be very much different from 50 ohms. We then calculate the SWR on a 50-ohm line which is terminated by the afore-mentioned input impedance. RESULTS of calculation MHz SWR Case 1 SWR Case 2 ------ ----------------- ---------------- 2 1.0002 1.0009 30 1.0028 1.0146 150 1.014 1.073 300 1.029 1.145 1000 1.105 1.524 It is seen that results do not become significant to a radio amateur, and almost everybody else, until he has made the serious mistake of using the wrong impedance connector, and the frequency has risen to 1000 MHz for which he hasn't an SWR meter anyway. Below 300 MHz the results are submerged well beneath the uncertainty of an SWR meter. Now we can take a balanced view of the situation. ---- Reg, G4FGQ |
"Reg Edwards" wrote in message ... Let's do what nobody has ever done before, not even in the ARRL handbooks or in Terman, and get an idea of the magnitudes involved. Examine two cases over a range of frequencies. Case (1). In a 50-ohm system, use of a poor connector having an impedance deviating 10 percent from its nominal value of 50 ohms. Case (2). Making the mistake of using a 75-ohm connector in a 50-ohm system. In both cases the connector, plug and socket, is 1" (25.4mm) long. We first calculate the input impedance of a 75-ohm transmission line, 1" long, terminated with 50 ohms. Zin will not be very much different from 50 ohms. We then calculate the SWR on a 50-ohm line which is terminated by the afore-mentioned input impedance. RESULTS of calculation MHz SWR Case 1 SWR Case 2 ------ ----------------- ---------------- 2 1.0002 1.0009 30 1.0028 1.0146 150 1.014 1.073 300 1.029 1.145 1000 1.105 1.524 It is seen that results do not become significant to a radio amateur, and almost everybody else, until he has made the serious mistake of using the wrong impedance connector, and the frequency has risen to 1000 MHz for which he hasn't an SWR meter anyway. Below 300 MHz the results are submerged well beneath the uncertainty of an SWR meter. Now we can take a balanced view of the situation. ---- Reg, G4FGQ Reg, I suspect your 1 inch length is overly pessimistic. Clearly, for an F connector, it is more like 1/2 inch. Lastly, if the load at the end is not 50.0, then any small deviation in the feedline could just as well improve things, as make it worse; this is probably not true for pulses or video. Think of an antenna tuner. It does nothing to the SWR on the main piece of line. Tam/WB2TT |
Reg,
Your math example does not illustrate the reality that the impedance change produced by a ~5/8" OD brass pin inserted radially into the dielectric space of coaxial transmission line can match that line into an adjacent termination of fairly high SWR (1.3:1 or so), at frequencies as low as 54MHz. As I wrote earlier, this technique is widely and successfully used to match the main transmission line of broadcast TV and FM stations to the net input impedance of their antenna (including its input elbows). - RF |
Your math example does not illustrate the reality that the impedance change produced by a ~5/8" OD brass pin inserted radially into the dielectric space of coaxial transmission line can match that line into an adjacent termination of fairly high SWR (1.3:1 or so), at frequencies as low as 54MHz. ============================= It's not intended to. But I'm sure you are right. Try not to worry about it. |
Wait a minute here... Seems to me that Reg is talking about two
opposing steps separated by a very short distance, and Richard is talking about a single step from one impedance to another. Clearly, Richard's case results in uncancelled echos related to the ratio of the impedances at the step. In fact, Reg's example results in significant uncancelled echos if the steps are separated by enough distance: worst at odd multiples of pi/2 electrical degrees. When the connector is only perhaps a few electrical degrees long, the steps nearly cancel. How long is 1", in electrical degrees? Well, at 1000MHz and a v.f. of perhaps 0.7, longer than one might have anticipated: almost 45 degrees long. So in fact at 1000MHz, a 1" section of 51.5 ohm connector might introduce a bit more than 1.03:1 SWR. But didn't we start out talking about a much lower frequency, and a much larger impedance difference? Another example I ran was 4 electrical degrees of connector...perhaps a bit less than an inch at 150MHz...where it's 75 ohms in a 50 ohm system. The swr for that came out about 1.06:1. The TV broadcast engineer should worry about things like that. The typical ham doesn't have equipment calibrated accurately enough that s/he should be worried about it, and it's unlikely to make any substantive difference anyway in typical ham work. Cheers, Tom "Richard Fry" wrote in message ... "Reg Edwards" wrote Richard, I have no reason to doubt anything you say. I have no reason to doubt what I have said. But why imply there's serious disagreement when there is none? _______________________ Clips from our previous posts (below) - I don't know what constitutes a "serious disagreement" to you, Reg, but I think most readers would say that we have opposite conclusions about this topic. If you have no reason to doubt what I wrote about this, how can you continue to support what you wrote? Our statements are mutually exclusive. YOU: "Provided the mechanical connection is sound, you can use any coaxial connectors you like, regardless of nominal impedance, at frequencies less than about 300 MHz without any observed ill effects. A connector less than 1" long of impedance 51.5 ohms in a 50 ohm system will NOT produce an SWR of 1.03:1 or anything anywhere near to it at frequencies less than 1000 MHz." ME: "This PRACTICAL experience illustrates that an impedance change even in a 54-60MHz TV channel occurring within a physical space of less than one inch can produce important and commercially supportable system benefits, despite your statements quoted above." - RF |
I won't "worry about it," as long as you refrain from posting absolute
statements about this that are demonstrably untrue. - RF "Reg Edwards" wrote in message ... Your math example does not illustrate the reality that the impedance change produced by a ~5/8" OD brass pin inserted radially into the dielectric space of coaxial transmission line can match that line into an adjacent termination of fairly high SWR (1.3:1 or so), at frequencies as low as 54MHz. ============================= It's not intended to. But I'm sure you are right. Try not to worry about it. |
Below is my response to an off-list e-mail I received on this topic, which
to some readers may add additional perspective on this topic. RF Visit http://rfry.org for FM broadcast RF system papers. _____________________________ Thanks for your comments. The reason I chimed in originally was because of Reg's absolute statement that preserving system Z throughout the transmission line and its connectors was unimportant below 1GHz (later 300MHz?). He said further that an impedance change across a 1" length of transmission line was irrelevant in that same spectrum. That is demonstrably untrue, as I pointed out by a real-world example taken from the broadcast industry. The net terminating Z of a TV/FM transmit antenna with its input elbows usually is not exactly 50 ohms, even though that is the impedance value that the hardware was designed to provide. Manufacturing, assembly and installation issues can and do change it. The main transmission line normally is closer to 50 ohms across the relevant bandwidth than the antenna/elbow termination connected to the far end of that line. The Z-matching hardware I described is effective at optimizing this far-end match, it _does_ improve the quality of the radiated signal, and it minimizes the stress on the main transmission line and the transmitter. And it does so by changing the impedance in a 1" or less length of transmission line adjacent to the antenna input, regardless of Reg's beliefs. Hams operating on the HF bands may not wish or even need to consider this, as I mentioned in an earlier post to this thread. But that is not license for Reg or anyone else to write that such disregard is universally justified. - RF |
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