Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ian Jackson wrote:
In message , writes Ian Jackson wrote: In message , writes Ian Jackson wrote: Even when the only transmission line consists the output connector of the SWR meter, and maybe an inch of internal coax, there will still BE a standing wave - but it will only be a tiny portion of longer one. There will NOT be standing waves and there will not be a voltage maximum and a voltage minimum unless there is a transmission line. Are you saying that for a standing wave to qualify as a standing wave, the transmission line needs to be long enough for there to be a voltage maximum a voltage minimum? I am saying that if the connection between the two things of interest is short enough in terms of wavelengths at the frequency of interest, the connection no longer functions as a transmission line, there are no standing waves, but the measurment we call SWR still exists. Pray tell me exactly (in wavelengths) when something which is too short to be a transmission line suddenly changes into something which IS long enough to be a transmission line. Sure. A transmission line is distinguished from a wire by the fact that a transmission line carries the energy in the form of an electromagnetic field contained by the structure of the transmission line while a wire carries the energy in the form of conduction in the wire. This is true for all transmission lines, be they parallel, coaxial, wave guide, microstrip, stripline, or any other type of transmission line. A conducting structure becomes a transmission line when it's length in wavelengths becomes long enough to allow the establishment of an electromagnetic field within it's structure. The general rule of thumb is that the dividing point is about 1/10 of a wavelength. For the pendatic, this does NOT mean that at exactly 1/10 of a wave length things suddenly change, it means that in general transmission line effects become negligable below 1/10 of a wave length. A piece of coax will not function as a transmission line at 1/100 of a wavelength even though it is constructed to be a transmission line because it is too small to establish an electromagnetic field between the center conductor and the shield. Note: This is a slightly simplified explaination, for details and mathematical derivations: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_line http://www.antenna-theory.com/tutori...ine.php#txline http://www.ece.uci.edu/docs/hspice/h...001_2-269.html http://www.allaboutcircuits.com/text...mission-lines/ Standing waves only occur on a transmission line and are due to reflections on the line. If the line length is too short to act as a transmission line, there can be no reflections and no standing waves. -- Jim Pennino |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message ,
writes Ian Jackson wrote: In message , writes Ian Jackson wrote: In message , writes Ian Jackson wrote: Even when the only transmission line consists the output connector of the SWR meter, and maybe an inch of internal coax, there will still BE a standing wave - but it will only be a tiny portion of longer one. There will NOT be standing waves and there will not be a voltage maximum and a voltage minimum unless there is a transmission line. Are you saying that for a standing wave to qualify as a standing wave, the transmission line needs to be long enough for there to be a voltage maximum a voltage minimum? I am saying that if the connection between the two things of interest is short enough in terms of wavelengths at the frequency of interest, the connection no longer functions as a transmission line, there are no standing waves, but the measurment we call SWR still exists. Pray tell me exactly (in wavelengths) when something which is too short to be a transmission line suddenly changes into something which IS long enough to be a transmission line. Sure. A transmission line is distinguished from a wire by the fact that a transmission line carries the energy in the form of an electromagnetic field contained by the structure of the transmission line while a wire carries the energy in the form of conduction in the wire. This is true for all transmission lines, be they parallel, coaxial, wave guide, microstrip, stripline, or any other type of transmission line. A conducting structure becomes a transmission line when it's length in wavelengths becomes long enough to allow the establishment of an electromagnetic field within it's structure. The general rule of thumb is that the dividing point is about 1/10 of a wavelength. For the pendatic, this does NOT mean that at exactly 1/10 of a wave length things suddenly change, it means that in general transmission line effects become negligable below 1/10 of a wave length. A piece of coax will not function as a transmission line at 1/100 of a wavelength even though it is constructed to be a transmission line because it is too small to establish an electromagnetic field between the center conductor and the shield. Note: This is a slightly simplified explaination, for details and mathematical derivations: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_line http://www.antenna-theory.com/tutori...ine.php#txline http://www.ece.uci.edu/docs/hspice/h...001_2-269.html http://www.allaboutcircuits.com/text...nt/chpt-14/lon g-and-short-transmission-lines/ Standing waves only occur on a transmission line and are due to reflections on the line. If the line length is too short to act as a transmission line, there can be no reflections and no standing waves. I haven't checked those references yet, but regardless of what they may say, if that 10' of coax between my TX and my 160m ATU is NOT a transmission line - just what IS it? Do different laws of physics apply? -- Ian |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ian Jackson wrote:
In message , writes Ian Jackson wrote: In message , writes Ian Jackson wrote: In message , writes Ian Jackson wrote: Even when the only transmission line consists the output connector of the SWR meter, and maybe an inch of internal coax, there will still BE a standing wave - but it will only be a tiny portion of longer one. There will NOT be standing waves and there will not be a voltage maximum and a voltage minimum unless there is a transmission line. Are you saying that for a standing wave to qualify as a standing wave, the transmission line needs to be long enough for there to be a voltage maximum a voltage minimum? I am saying that if the connection between the two things of interest is short enough in terms of wavelengths at the frequency of interest, the connection no longer functions as a transmission line, there are no standing waves, but the measurment we call SWR still exists. Pray tell me exactly (in wavelengths) when something which is too short to be a transmission line suddenly changes into something which IS long enough to be a transmission line. Sure. A transmission line is distinguished from a wire by the fact that a transmission line carries the energy in the form of an electromagnetic field contained by the structure of the transmission line while a wire carries the energy in the form of conduction in the wire. This is true for all transmission lines, be they parallel, coaxial, wave guide, microstrip, stripline, or any other type of transmission line. A conducting structure becomes a transmission line when it's length in wavelengths becomes long enough to allow the establishment of an electromagnetic field within it's structure. The general rule of thumb is that the dividing point is about 1/10 of a wavelength. For the pendatic, this does NOT mean that at exactly 1/10 of a wave length things suddenly change, it means that in general transmission line effects become negligable below 1/10 of a wave length. A piece of coax will not function as a transmission line at 1/100 of a wavelength even though it is constructed to be a transmission line because it is too small to establish an electromagnetic field between the center conductor and the shield. Note: This is a slightly simplified explaination, for details and mathematical derivations: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_line http://www.antenna-theory.com/tutori...ine.php#txline http://www.ece.uci.edu/docs/hspice/h...001_2-269.html http://www.allaboutcircuits.com/text...nt/chpt-14/lon g-and-short-transmission-lines/ Standing waves only occur on a transmission line and are due to reflections on the line. If the line length is too short to act as a transmission line, there can be no reflections and no standing waves. I haven't checked those references yet, but regardless of what they may say, if that 10' of coax between my TX and my 160m ATU is NOT a transmission line - just what IS it? Do different laws of physics apply? No, it means that you can view the coax as just a wire and that the transmission line effects are negligable. About the only practical consequence of this that I can think of off the top of my head at the moment, is that a very short, in wavelengths, piece of coax does not have a characteristic impedance so it would not matter what kind of coax you use. To put it another way, if your system is the common 50 Ohms and you had the very best of lab grade test equipment, for very short lengths you would see no difference between using 50 Ohm coax and 100 Ohm coax. As you increase the length, you begin to see differences, and at some length around 1/10 of a wavelength the differences become big enough to be significant. -- Jim Pennino |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Vertical Antenna Performance Question | Antenna | |||
Antenna Question: Vertical Whip Vs. Type X | Scanner | |||
Question about 20-meter monoband vertical (kinda long - antenna gurus welcome) | Antenna | |||
Technical Vertical Antenna Question | Shortwave | |||
Short STACKED Vertical {Tri-Band} BroomStick Antenna [Was: Wire ant question] | Shortwave |