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On Thu, 27 May 2004 16:49:26 GMT, "Lord Snooty" wrote:
"Richard Clark" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 26 May 2004 02:07:50 GMT, "Lord Snooty" wrote: Hi Andrew, a load capacitor value of 250 +/- 10pF (-j80 ohms @ 8 MHz) was found to produce a minimum in the total voltage across the load. What was the voltage? Load voltage lies in the 5 to 20 volt peak range, depending on the power setting. This minimum represented about a 15% dip. Pick ONE power setting. What was the voltage across the load. Also, as capacitance was increased over the range 100-700pF, the voltage across the load resistor increased monotonically. What were the voltages? Again, a nominal value between 5 and 20 V pk. Pick the ONE and SAME power setting. What was the voltage across the load resistor for: 100pF 200pF 300pF .... 700pF The latter is easy to explain (it means the source reactance is positive, and smaller than +j28.4 ohms), but the former is beyond my ken. as the capacitive reactance falls, you note the voltage climbs, this hardly requires an inductance to explain this. Simple divider action serves quite well. You have since revealed the inductor buffered output, but the data is still pretty skimpy to bless it as the major contributor to source Z. Agreed, but if I keep increasing the load C (decreasing the capacitative reactance ), I will see a peak in the voltage across the load resistor, which will only happen if a conjugate match is occurring. This is a violation of terms. Just what constitutes the generator? At one time you say the combination of the cap-resistor is the load, hence the source is described ACROSS this series. THEN you isolate the resistor which pushes the cap back into the source. You originally asked for the complex impedance of the source, but if the source contains a variable cap, this makes determination rather a moving target. In the world of metrology (folks who measure this stuff for a living), you have an immutable boundary called the plane of the source. On one side is everything that can be attributed to the source and everything on the other side can be attributed to the load. If there is a transmission line between, then you have two planes, the plane of the source, and the plane of the load. Everything to the right of the plane of the load (thinking in a left-right progression) can be attributed to the load. Between the two planes is a transform. The plane of the source is commonly the output connector, the plane of the load is commonly the input connector. Things in between like tuners, SWR meters, Lines, dividers, splitters, duplexers... are transforms. It is perfectly justifiable to make a component like a tuner resident within (and behind) either plane, but once you do that, it is considered bad form to go tweaking it and maintain nothing has happened to the source/load. What are you using to measure this voltage? A scope probe set to 10x, which has an unmeasurably high DC resistance and a capacitance of 22 pF (measured). It's a good idea to use the 10x, not 1x, setting, since the latter contributes about 80 pF, and will change the AC response of the circuit. Perfectly adequate. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |