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![]() "Roy Lewallen" wrote If we connect a transmitter to an SWR meter, and then to a long piece of lossless cable with the same Z0 as the SWR meter, and finally to a load, the SWR meter reading will be the same as the VSWR on the cable, i.e., the ratio of maximum to minimum voltages on the line. ========================================= It is at this point where impressionable novices are led astray by old wives, never again to return to logical thought on the subject. They imagine that because the meter happens to indicate the swr on the line, the meter is actually responding to the swr on it. Whereas the meter is actually responding to the modulus of the reflection coefficient caused by the line's input impedance regardless of what its Zo may be. The act of making the line's Zo and the meter's resistance both equal to the transmitter's designed-for load resistance, has put additional infomation into the system. Cooking the books! If there's an SWR to be indicated it is on a long line between meter and the transmitter. In the absence of such a line the meter wastefully discards half of the information it is presented with and indicates the modulus of the reflection cofficient. A more appropriate name is TLI. ---- Reg, G4FGQ |
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