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In message , Jeff writes
If the ATU is adjusted so that the Tx sees a 1:1 match then no power is reflected to the transmitter. A 1:1 match means that there is no power reflected to the Tx by definition (and can be proved by measurement). By conservation of energy then all of the power must be radiated or lost as heat, (mostly in the coax). When the ATU gives a conjugate match, (ie the Tx sees a 1:1 vswr) the phase of the re-reflected wave at the antenna is 0, ie it is in-phase with the original forward wave and so any power that is not re-re-reflected again adds to the power supplied to the antenna. If the coax were lossless, and there were no losses in-the ATU, then ALL of the power that was supplied by the tx would be radiated regardless of the mismatch at coax to antenna interface. However, in reality even small coax losses add up to a significant loss when the mismatch at the coax to antenna interface is high due to the number of times that the power bounces up & down the coax suffering loss on each trip.. A concise explanation. What is the easiest way of calculating the power loss (say, assuming it's all in coax, and none in the ATU)? Is it simply a case of adding up a large number of diminishing losses as the signal repeatedly rattles up and down the coax (until it becomes so small that the losses can be ignored), or are there some more-elegant (and accurate) methods? The easiest way is to make an Excel spreadsheet. Convert the VSWR to return loss and convert to a ratio. Take the Tx power subtract the line loss and multiply the RL ratio to get the reflected power. Subtract that power from the incident power to find the power transmitted. Take the reflected power and subtract twice the line loss, then multiply that incident power by the RL ratio and continue as above, adding the proportion that goes to that antenna to the transmitted power. Also add the 2x line loss the the original line loss to get the power dissipated in the coax. Repeat above until the reflected power becomes insignificant; probably at least six ox seven time if the vswr is very high. Ah yes! Thanks. It's a while since I honed my skills in driving an Excel spreadsheet! I'll certainly give it a go. -- Ian |
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