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Ok, I'll try once more.
Look again at what I wrote earlier: No, you won't see a change in the SWR at point 1 as you change the PA impedance. All the fiddling you do with your Smith chart just won't make it happen. Sorry. The SWR, voltage, current, impedance, power, reflection coefficient, waves, or anything else don't change in response to your Smith chart exercises. To which you replied: Absolutely incorrect. Time for you to review your Smith Chart again. Here's an experiment for you to try. On your workbench, measure the characteristic impedance of a cable, or connect it to a source or load and measure the SWR on it. Now go over to your desk, take out your grease pencil, and change the reference impedance of your Smith chart. Go back to the bench, check the SWR and the cable Z0. Has it changed? If the answer is yes, I'll admit having a serious shortcoming in my knowledge of the power of the Smith chart. If *you'll* review the Smith chart again, you'll find that *if* you set the reference impedance to the Z0 of the transmission line you're analyzing, then the SWR, impedances, and so forth that your read from the Smith chart are correct. If you set the reference impedance to some other value, an SWR read from the chart certainly isn't the SWR on the transmission line. Z0 in the equation you quote refers to the characteristic impedance of a transmission line. If you change the impedance of the transmission line, given the same load impedance Zl, you change the SWR, as the equation indicates. (Changing the reflection coefficient changes the SWR on the line.) But changing the reference value on your Smith chart doesn't change the characteristic impedance of the cable. Now let's see what you wrote this time: Dr. Slick wrote: . . . When you change Zo, you change the normalized center of the Smith, and therefore the Ref. Coeff. and SWR, looking into the same load. Yes. When you change the line's Z0, you should change the normalization of the Smith chart. But changing the normalization of the Smith chart doesn't magically change the cable dimensions to give it a correspondingly new Z0. (Or does it? Something I'm missing here?) The Smith Chart is an extremely powerful graphical RF tool, which has become part of the basis for communicating in the RF world, as well as a standard for displaying impedance on most RF measuring devices. You need to read up on this if you want to understand me. Thank you, although I'm not an expert at using the Smith chart, I know my way around the circle. But perhaps more study would reveal the mechanism by which changing the chart reference causes spontaneous redimensioning of the cable. Even when the other person is correct too? I think it IS an ego trip if you can't admit someone has a point, and are too scared to discuss it further for fear of looking weak or exposing a lack of knowledge about something. All right, I was scared to admit that you have a point, that all you have to do to change a line's SWR is to go over to the desk and change your Smith chart. But I've overcome my fear now, and am exposing my ignorance, or weakness as you say, for all to see. I'd like to learn more about the mechanism, though. When you renormalize your Smith chart, is the line's Z0 changed by a spontaneous change in inner conductor diameter, outer conductor diameter, dielectric permittivity, or some combination? Is it some sort of telekinesis, or perhaps something to do with Chi? I never could quite get the hang of Feng Shui, so maybe that's it. I can't find any reference to the phenomenon you're claiming in my engineering texts -- perhaps an occult or New Age bookstore would be more fruitful? From Pozar's Microwave Engineering: Reflection Coefficient = (Zl-Zo)/(Zl+Zo) Where Zl is a purely real load impedance, and Zo is the purely real characteristic impedance reference. When you change Zo, you change the normalized center of the Smith, and therefore the Ref. Coeff. and SWR, looking into the same load. Almost right, but a misplaced "therefore". The reflection coefficient and SWR don't change because you change the Smith chart normalization. They change because you've changed the cable's Z0. If you know how to use a Smith chart correctly, you can then go and renormalize your Smith chart to the new Z0 (as you've said), and from it you can read what the new reflection coefficient and SWR are. Or you can forget the Smith chart altogether and measure them, or calculate them from an equation. But if you normalize your Smith chart to some value other than the cable's Z0, you're no longer reading the transmission line impedances and SWR from it. It sure looks to me like you're confusing reality with what you read from your arbitrarily normalized Smith chart. They're not the same. Just like the reading on an SWR meter isn't the same as the SWR on a transmission line of a different impedance. And actually for exactly the same reason. Hm, maybe that provides even one more way to say it. Set up your source, cable, and SWR meter like you have it in your earlier posting. Replace the 50 ohm SWR meter with a 75 ohm SWR meter. Renormalize your Smith chart for 75 ohms. Presto! The SWR meter reads the same as the Smith chart! But y'know what? YOU DIDN'T CHANGE THE SWR ON THE TRANSMISSION LINE. Put the 50 ohm SWR meter back in just on the load side of the 75 ohm one. It reads just the same as it did before, and it's reading the actual SWR on the 50 ohm line between it and the load. Again, changing the Smith chart's normalization does not change a cable's Z0 or SWR. Feng Shui and voodoo notwithstanding. A Smith chart is simply (not to disparage in any way its ingeniousness or utility) a polar plot of reflection coefficient on a special scale. (The trick is, of course, generating the scale, an exercise in conformal mapping I recall doing in fields class.) Check it out -- measure the length of the vector from the center to any impedance point (with the chart radius equalling one), and the angle from the main axis (zero ohms being the positive direction), and you'll see you have the reflection coefficient. I can't figure out any more ways to say this. I am always interested in learning. I don't use a Smith chart a great deal, but I know Tom Bruhns, a regular poster here, does. I'll gladly defer to him on issues of Smith chart use, and hope he'll feel free to correct me on any errors I've made in the above discussion -- as he has a number of times in the past, and which I've greatly appreciated. Walt Maxwell, an occasional poster, is truly a Smith chart expert, and I'd also welcome any corrections or amplifications he'd care to make. Or any other knowledgeable Smith chart user. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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