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On 7/2/2015 3:24 PM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
"Jerry Stuckle" wrote in message ... On 7/2/2015 1:56 PM, Ralph Mowery wrote: "Jerry Stuckle" wrote in message ... You are correct in that if a 75 ohm bridge is used, the indicated SWR would be 1:1, because everything from that point on is 75 ohms. However, the mismatch (and reflection) occurs on the transmitter side of the bridge, not the antenna side. So the bridge will never see it. But an accurate bridge will show lower power output due to the mismatch. A mismatch is a mismatch, no matter where in the system it occurs. And any mismatch will cause less than 100% power to be transferred. The rest is reflected. Just look at the specs of any amateur transceiver. They show an impedance of 50 ohms. So a load of 50 ohms provides for maximum power transfer; any other impedance causes a mismatch. -- The real impedance of the transmitter is not 50 ohms. It is whatever the device is used in the final stage and the poewr level. For a 100 watt transmitter it is in the thousand ohm range and for solid state devices it is very low. The matching circuit is often fixed to be 50 ohms,but could be made for most any impedance. The older tube circuits were adjustable by the user for a range of somewhat bleow 50 ohms to around 200 ohms. Could be more or less depending on the design. Incorrect. The real impedance of the transmitter is 50 ohms. The impedance of the final stage may be above or below that, and is matched to the 50 ohm standard. What happens before the match is unimportant. The only important part of the discussion is the 50 ohm output. The mismatch you are counting on for a 50 ohm transmitter and a 75 ohm feedline and 75 ohm antenna is in the tuned circuits/matching circuit in the transmitter. Whatever power comes out of the transmitter will make it to the antenna minus the loss of the coax, but not additional loss due to swr. The power comming out of a 50 ohm transmitter will be less due to mismatch, but not because of swr of the antenna system which is 1:1. Incorrect. The connection between the 50 ohm transmitter and the 75 ohm coax is also part of the antenna system. The system starts at the transmitter output (actually the output of the final stage - but since this is converted to the 50 ohm standard, you can effectively consider the output of the matching network to be the start of the antenna system), not the coax. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
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