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On 7/4/2015 9:43 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Sat, 04 Jul 2015 19:33:30 -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote: On 7/4/2015 7:22 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sat, 04 Jul 2015 19:04:01 -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote: Think of it this way, without the math. On the transmitter side of the network, the match is 1:1, with nothing reflected back to the transmitter. So you have a signal coming back from the antenna. You have a perfect matching network, which means nothing is lost in the network. The feedline is perfect, so there is no loss in it. The only place for the signal to go is back to the antenna. Wikipedia says that if the source is matched to the line, any reflections that come back are absorbed, not reflected back to the antenna: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impedance_matching "If the source impedance matches the line, reflections from the load end will be absorbed at the source end. If the transmission line is not matched at both ends reflections from the load will be re-reflected at the source and re-re-reflected at the load end ad infinitum, losing energy on each transit of the transmission line." And you believe everything Wikipedia says? ROFLMAO. But that also explains your ignorance. Let's see if I understand you correctly. You claim that with a power amplifier (source) output impedance that is perfectly matched to the coax cable, but not necessarily the load (antenna), any reflected power from the load (antenna) is bounced back to the load (antenna) by the perfectly matched source (power amp). Is that what you're saying? With a perfect matching network and a perfect feedline (which is what we are discussing), that is true. But I also know that is far beyond your limited intelligence. Yet, when I have a perfectly matched load (antenna), all the power it is fed is radiated and nothing is reflected. You can't have it both ways because the reflected power from the load (antenna), becomes the incident power going towards the source (power amp). Matched and mismatched loads do NOT act differently depending on the direction of travel. If you claim were true, then transmitting into a matched antenna or dummy load would reflect all the power back towards the transmitter. Nothing wrong with it at all - except your limited intelligence can't understand simple physics. But then that's nothing new. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
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