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Walter Maxwell wrote:
W5DXP wrote: Think about that. Why would you expect your re-reflected voltage and Steve's re-reflected voltage to be the same value when they have completely different definitions? Where are the completely different definitions? Steve defines re-reflected voltage as voltage reflected from the load multiplied by the rearward-looking physical reflection coefficient, (Z1-Z2)/(Z1+Z2). That's certainly not the definition of your reflection coefficient for reflected voltage. Why are you surprised that you two guys get different values of re-reflected voltage when you are using entirely different voltage reflection coefficients? Cecil, I don't recall defining re-reflection, nor do I recall seeing any definition of it by Steve. And that, in a nutshell, is the entire problem. You implied your definition of re-reflection in _Reflections_. Steve implied his definition of re-reflection in his QEX article. They are NOT the same definitions. Your definition of re- reflected voltage involves a reflection coefficient of 1.0 at your virtual short. Steve's reflection coefficient is the *physical reflection coefficient*, not the virtual reflection coefficient and is NEVER equal to 1.0. However, in general, V1 and V2 cannot be added, or superposed if the energy involved comes from only one source. True for your model - not true for Steve's model. You guys are NOT using the same model. You are as far apart as the wave/particle controversy. I simply can't accept that there can be more than one definition of re-reflection. But there is, Walt. The S-parameter analysis defines re-reflection differently than you do. In the equation, b2 = s21(a1) + s22(a2), the s22(a2) term is the re-reflected voltage. It is defined as the voltage reflected from the load multiplied by the physical reflection coefficient looking into port 2 when the source is replaced by Z0. That is NOT the way you define re-reflected voltage. And as I said in a much earlier postI must remind you that Steve made a vital error when he said: "When two forward-traveling waves add, general superposition theory and Kirchhoff's voltage law require that the vector sum of the individual forward-traveling voltages such that VFtotal = V1 + V2." This statement is not true in general. That statement is true in general for an S-parameter analysis. You and Dr. Best are not using the same analysis model. This is what makes Eq 9 clearly invalid in general. Eq 9 is valid for an S-parameter analysis. I doubt that you are going to be able to discredit the entire field of S-parameter analysis so you might as well accept the fact that you are calling a shrub a "tree" and Steve is calling a shrub a "plant". Either both of your are right or both or you are wrong. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |