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#192
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On 7/7/2015 10:14 AM, Wayne wrote:
"John S" wrote in message ... On 7/5/2015 7:08 PM, Wayne wrote: "Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message ... On Sun, 05 Jul 2015 20:22:19 +0100, Brian Reay wrote: As for a simpler way, I'd recommend a remote auto-matcher like an SGC at the antenna base. It will minimise coax losses and should give you a good match, at least for most bands. I've used a similar set up (with radials) and achieved a good match even on 80m. If your radio has a built in tuner, then it can be used to 'tweak' the match in the event the radio isn't 'seeing' 1.5:1. Turn it off initially. Let the SGC find a match. If it isn't ideal, use the local ATU for a final tweak. I never found this was required but YMMV. Not everyone is a true believer in antenna tuners: http://www.qsl.net/g3tso/Hombrew-Mobile%20Antennas.html Interesting. I'm off on a different approach. I have an RF ammeter mounted in a box. The box is in the shack between the ATU and the antenna. I simply adjust the ATU for max current on the ammeter. Hey, Wayne - As a matter of curiosity on my part, can you find a way to measure the ammeter's resistance and let me know the full-scale value? No, I don't have enough test equipment to easily do that. With a DVM it measures 0.4 ohms and with a VOM measures 28 ohms. And the VOM gives no needle movement. It is a O. D. McClintock Signal Corp typs I S-III with full scale of 2.5 amps. Since it was salvaged from some WW II equipment back in the 1950s, it probably isn't calibrated. But, it gives a useable relative reading. Many thanks for the info. The reason I asked was that I thought it might be possible to build one. I need a starting point. Again, thanks. |
#193
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On 7/5/2015 11:12 AM, rickman wrote:
On 7/5/2015 11:35 AM, John S wrote: I encourage all of you to read Walter Maxwell's (W2DU) book "Reflections III". It will explain everything about this. Everything you are discussing has been put to bed. Of course it has. We are not inventing anything here, we are trying to understand it. Does this writing have a Cliff Notes version? I don't know. I bought the book. |
#194
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Ian Jackson wrote:
In message , rickman writes On 7/7/2015 6:25 AM, Ian Jackson wrote: In message , Jerry Stuckle writes Sure, there is ALWAYS VSWR. It may be 1:1, but it's always there. If there's no reflection, there can be no standing wave. So, being pedantic, there's no such thing as an SWR of 1:1! Why do you say that? If there is no reflection the voltage on the line is purely due to the forward signal and so the VSWR is 1:1. What's wrong with that? A standing wave is caused by a reflection. If there IS no reflection, there is NO standing wave. So while you can have an SWR of 1.00000000000001-to-1 (because a standing wave DOES exist), you can't really have one of 1-to-1 (because there IS no standing wave). ;o)) [Just a bit of pedantic, lateral thinking on my part. Don't worry too much about it. It has absolutely no bearing whatsoever on the current discussions.] Quite so: a voltage standing wave *ratio* of 1 means no standing wave. But in the name of the unit the "standing wave" is adjectival, and it is still a valid name even when there is no standing wave. And, anyway, you can still colloquially have a resistance of zero ohms even for a superconductor! -- Roger Hayter |
#195
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In article , rickman wrote:
Lol. You are a trip. I'm not going to spend $100 on a book just to see if you are right. I was intrigued by the idea that a wire could carry a signal without the resistance dissipating power according to P = I^2 R. I guess there is some communication failure. Yah. It's a question of terminology. Unfortunately, one term has come to be used for two (related but different) concepts. There is "resistance", as in the E=I^2*R sort. If I recall correctly, Maxwell refers to this as "dissipative" impedance. If you put current through a dissipative resistance, a voltage drop develops across the resistance, and power is dissipated. There are plenty of examples of this, with which I'm sure you're familiar. There is also "resistance", as in "the 'real', non-reactive component of a complex impedance, in which current is in phase with voltage." This type of "resistance" is fundamentally non-dissipative - that is, you can run power through it without dissipating the power as heat. There are also good examples of this. One "textbook" example would be a perfectly-lossless transmission line... say, one made out of a wire and tube of a superconductor, cooled to below the superconducting temperature. You can (in principle) build such a superconducting coax to have almost any convenient impedance... 50 or 75 ohms, for example. Since we're theorizing, let's assume we can built one a few trillion miles long... so long that the far end is light-years away. If you hook a transmitter to one end of this and start transmitting, it will "look" to the transmitter like a 50-ohm dummy load. The transmitter itself won't be able to tell the difference. The transmitter puts out an RF voltage, and the line "takes current" exactly in phase with the voltage, in a ratio of one RF ampere per 50 RF volts. But, there's a fundamental difference between this "resistance" and that of a dummy load. A 50-ohm dummy load's resistance is dissipative... all of the power going into it turns into heat, and is dissipated in accordance with the fundamental laws of thermodynamics. *None* of the power being fed into the superconducting coax, is dissipated as heat in the coax. All of the power still exists, in its original RF form. It's being stored/propagated down the coax without loss. When it hits a load at the other end, it may be dissipated as heat there. Or, perhaps not. What if what's at the other end of the superconducting coax is a superconducting antenna, tweaked to present an impedance of exactly 50 ohms? The RF will be radiated into space. And, "free space" is another great example of a medium that has a well-defined "resistance" (in the non-dissipated sense). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impedance_of_free_space One of the fundamental jobs of an antenna, is to match the impedance of its feedline to the impedance of free space. Now, any coax you can buy at the store has *both* types of "resistance", of course. It has a dissipative component, and a non-dissipative component. Typically, the more you spend and the more you have to strain your back carrying it around, the lower the amount of dissipative resistance (which is only good for keeping the pigeons' feet warm) and the more predictable and precisely-defined the non-dissipative part. |
#196
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In message , Jerry Stuckle
writes On 7/7/2015 6:25 AM, Ian Jackson wrote: In message , Jerry Stuckle writes Sure, there is ALWAYS VSWR. It may be 1:1, but it's always there. If there's no reflection, there can be no standing wave. So, being pedantic, there's no such thing as an SWR of 1:1! Wrong. An SWR of 1:1 indicates a perfect match, with no reflected power. It is recognized by all electronics texts and experts. My suggestion would be for you to learn some transmission line theory. Your statement here just showed you have no knowledge of it at all. Even when I took my novice test many years ago I had to understand SWR better than that. The point I'm trying to make is not technical. It's simply one of verbal logic. Without the presence of a standing wave, you can't possibly have something called a "standing wave ratio". But, like all RF engineers, an SWR of 1-to-1 is something I too strive to achieve! "Yesterday, upon the stair, I met a man who wasn't there. He wasn't there again today, I wish, I wish he'd go away..." -- Ian |
#197
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John S wrote:
On 7/6/2015 1:03 PM, wrote: John S wrote: On 7/6/2015 11:01 AM, Jerry Stuckle wrote: On 7/6/2015 4:20 AM, Ian Jackson wrote: In message , rickman writes How about we quit with the speculation and come up with some numbers? Here is a simulation of a 50 ohm load with a 50 ohm matched series output impedance and a voltage source of 200 VAC peak. Power into the load is 100 W. http://arius.com/sims/Matched%20Load%20Power.png Same exact circuit with the series impedance of just 1 ohm, power into the load is 385 W. http://arius.com/sims/UnMatched%20Load%20Power.png I'd say that is pretty clear evidence that matched loads are not the way to maximize power transfer when the load impedance is fixed and the output impedance is controllable. Quite simply, if your prime objective is to get maximum power out of a power (energy?) source, the source having an internal resistance is a BAD THING. You don't design the source to have an internal resistance equal to its intended load resistance. No one designs lead-acid batteries that way (do they?), so why RF transmitters? While theoretically you can extract the maximum power available from the source when the load resistance equals the source resistance, you can only do so provided that the heat you generate in the source does not cause the source to malfunction (in the worst case, blow up). Because DC power transfer is not the same as AC power transfer. Why not? Does something happen to the laws of physics with AC? Yes, quite a lot, you get a whole new set of laws. If you apply 1vDC to a 1 ohm resistor, you get 1A of current. If you apply 1vAC RMS (at any frequency) to a 1 ohm resistor, you get 1A of current. How does the AC change the law? What part of "you get a whole new set of laws" was it you failed to understand? Here's a clue for you; at DC the reactive components of a length of wire are irrelevant but at AC they are not. -- Jim Pennino |
#198
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Ian Jackson wrote:
In message , Jerry Stuckle writes Sure, there is ALWAYS VSWR. It may be 1:1, but it's always there. If there's no reflection, there can be no standing wave. So, being pedantic, there's no such thing as an SWR of 1:1! Despite the name, VSWR is defined in terms of complex impedances and wavelengths, not "waves" of any kind. -- Jim Pennino |
#199
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Brian Reay wrote:
Do the experiment. Did it decades ago in electromagnetics lab with calibrated test equipmemnt, not with amateur radio equipment. -- Jim Pennino |
#200
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Brian Reay wrote:
On 06/07/15 01:21, wrote: John S wrote: On 7/5/2015 5:24 PM, wrote: Roger Hayter wrote: wrote: The output impedance of an amateur transmitter IS approximately 50 Ohms as is trivially shown by reading the specifications for the transmitter which was designed and manufactured to match a 50 Ohm load. Do you think all those manuals are lies? You are starting with a false premise which makes everything after that false. A quick google demonstrates dozens of specification sheets that say the transmitter is designed for a 50 ohm load, and none that mention its output impedance. If the source impedance were other than 50 Ohms, the SWR with 50 Ohm coax and a 50 Ohm antenna would be high. It is not. Where is the source impedance found on a Smith chart? Also, if you have EZNEC, you will not find a place to specify source impedance but it will show the SWR. A Smith chart is normalized to 1. That is true but is doesn't address the point. There should still be somewhere to represent the source impedance, albeit normalised. The purpose of a Smith chart it to match a SOURCE to a LOAD. EZNEC allows you to set the impedance to anything you want and assumes the transmission line matches the transmitter. Likewise, that is a sweeping statement which evades the point. The main purpose of EZNEC is to design an antenna for amateur radio use and all commercial amateur radio transmitters have an output impedance of 50 Ohms. -- Jim Pennino |
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