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"Reg Edwards" wrote in message ...
Magid has the most rigorous derivation of power and energy flow on transmission lines, ========================== The following short question is adressed to all contributors to this newsgroup who feel impelled to bolster their lack of self-confidence by dragging in the chapter and verse of their favourite worshipped authors and Gurus, most of whom nobody has ever heard of and highly unlikely ever to get their hands on. How do you know that? Gee, Reg, since you took that out of context, it seems a bit unfair. Roy wrote it, and after the comma was, "I've seen." I don't know it, but I'm willing to take Roy at his word on the matter. Cheers, Tom |
#2
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"Tom Bruhns" wrote
"Reg Edwards" wrote Magid has the most rigorous derivation of power and energy flow on transmission lines, ========================== The following short question is adressed to all contributors to this newsgroup who feel impelled to bolster their lack of self-confidence by dragging in the chapter and verse of their favourite worshipped authors and Gurus, most of whom nobody has ever heard of and highly unlikely ever to get their hands on. How do you know that? ============================ Gee, Reg, since you took that out of context, it seems a bit unfair. Roy wrote it, and after the comma was, "I've seen." I don't know it, but I'm willing to take Roy at his word on the matter. =========================== The question asked was - "How do you know that Magid has the most rigorous derivation of . . . . . . ". Of what the derivation was was of no consequence. It was a matter of judgement of Magid's (or anybody else's) qualifications and authority. What was the purpose of referring to somebody hardly anybody has ever heard of? --- Reg. |
#3
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Gee, Reg, if all references had to be by someone you've heard of, we'd
be pretty much restricted to Heaviside and Edwards. The purpose was to let people know that there's a derivation which looks to me to be rigorous and which comes to an interesting conclusion -- the same conclusion I reached some time ago with my own analysis, in fact. A valid analysis is a valid analysis regardless of who did it. But for anyone who is interested, Magid taught at M.I.T. and Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. In the introduction, the author states: "I wish to express my profound indebtedness and thanks to Professors Richard B. Adler, Lan Jen Chu, and Robert M. Fano of the Electrical Engineering Department of M.I.T., both for their continued support and encouragement in this project and for their and their present publisher's (The M.I.T. Press) permission to draw freely on many of their concepts, ideas, and even, in a few cases, some well-chosen words from their abovementioned textbooks. I owe a special debt of gratitude to Professor Chu for the innumerable hours that he unselfishly devoted to assisting me in organizing this book." I know this is meaningless to you, Reg, since you undoubtedly haven't heard of any of those professors, either, let alone read any of their classic papers. Perhaps you haven't heard of M.I.T., either, or at least disdain it due to its location on the wrong side of the Atlantic. That's fine. Thankfully, good engineering will continue to get done without your approval. If you're interested only in analyses by people you've heard of, that's fine. It's obviously a very short list, so you'll be able to continue to reject just about anything out of hand. Seeing something written certainly doesn't make it so. But seeing it in a text that's undergone considerable scrutiny by very knowledgeable people makes it worthy, to me, of careful consideration. Certainly it deserves a lot more respect than off-hand comments from people with little constructive or rational to offer. And certainly a lot more than conclusions stated with great fan-fare and authority but not backed up by any development or evidence. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Reg Edwards wrote: The question asked was - "How do you know that Magid has the most rigorous derivation of . . . . . . ". Of what the derivation was was of no consequence. It was a matter of judgement of Magid's (or anybody else's) qualifications and authority. What was the purpose of referring to somebody hardly anybody has ever heard of? --- Reg. |
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