Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Rob" napisał w wiadomości ... Szczepan Bialek wrote: napisa3 w wiadomo?ci ... Szczepan Bialek wrote: They jump off from the end (corona) after the time equal to speed of light. They do not flow from the transmitter to the end of antenna. They kick the next ones. It is the oscillatory flow. You have been told time and time again that there is no corona in normal antenna operation. But is in unnormal operation. When it is seen? Only when you output kilowatts of power and there is some point in the antenna where the voltage is very high. I was asking on the speed of electrons in the conductor. But a radio amateur knows that it is possible to transmit signals with arbitrarily low power and that the range becomes smaller but it still works all the time. So even with very low voltages, where there is no corona, a transmitter still transmits. "Leakage current is also any current that flows when the ideal current is zero". Real current is not the ideal one. S* |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Using speaker wire for a dipole | Antenna | |||
80m Dipole fed with open wire feeder. | Antenna | |||
Newbie with a wire dipole | CB | |||
Receiver dipole vs 23 ft wire for HF | Antenna | |||
Long wire vs. G5RV/dipole | Shortwave |