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![]() "JGBOYLES" wrote in message ... All radio people suffer from delusions of measuring accuracy. RF power measurements are the most inaccurate of all. The accuracy of measurements are a function of the instrument user. They who attempt to grasp support by stating the manufacturer's type number of the instruments used are most in need of the self-confidence it falsly generates. Hi Reg. What exactly are you talking about? I had a few minutes in between Hurricane Ivans wrath to get the Emergency generator cranked up and had a chance to read this. Lucky you don't have these things in the UK. 73 Gary N4AST Gary, I saw an interesting curve at a resistor manufacturer's web site. It plotted resistor error as a function of F(MHz) x R(Meg) for 1/4 W carbon resistors. To make a long story short, the resistor error will be about 20% where the Megahertz x MegaOhms = 1. That means the resistor value will be 1/ Frequency. So, at 30 MHz, the resistor will be in error by 20% if it is bigger than 1/30 =.033 Meg, or 33K. That, I believe ignores capacitive effects. Personally, I have never tried to put RF through a resistor bigger than a few hundred Ohms. It occurs to me that you can ignore capacitive effects if you make all resistors identical. For instance, if you want a 3:1 divider make the series resistor 10K, and the shunt resistor two 10K resistors in parallel. Of course, you will need a high impedance load on it. Let's see if anybody shoots this down. Tam |
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