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On 7/7/2015 11:09 AM, 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.] Sounds great, but that is not how the VSWR is defined. ![]() -- Rick |
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