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Dr. Slick wrote:
I disagree on this point. You are caught up in the 50 Ohm world, which i admit is easy to do. The SWR is based on the ratio of the forward to the reflected power. That's not correct. The SWR (more correctly VSWR) is, by definition, the ratio of the highest to lowest voltages which appear on a line long enough to have both a maximum and minimum. It can be calculated from the forward and reverse voltage waves. ISWR, the current standing wave ratio, is numerically equal to the VSWR. If you had an analyzer that was calibrated to 20 Ohms (the same as normalizing the Smith for 20 Ohms in the center) you would certainly have reflected power and high SWR going into a 50 Ohm load. And a 20 Ohm load would have a 1:1 SWR. Loads do not have an SWR, only transmission lines do. The fact that you get a reading on an SWR meter when it's connected to a resistor doesn't alter that. You have to realize that an SWR meter isn't really measuring SWR, as Reg has repeatedly pointed out. It's actually measuring an impedance, and reporting that on a scale marked SWR. So you have to be careful to avoid making the mistake of confusing an SWR meter reading with the SWR on a cable it's connected to. The two correspond only if the cable's Z0 equals the SWR meter's. Likewise, you have to realize that you don't change the SWR or "reflected power" when you change the normalization of your network analyzer or Smith chart. Those things are a function only of the load and transmission line impedance, not on your measurements or calculations. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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