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Dave:
[snip] these discussions always seem to end up in this same quagmire, one group trying to solve everything with wave equations, sinusoidal steady states, transmission line transformations, and the other holding on to the lumped models and trying to make them fit the wrong problem domain. one thing i did learn in ee classes was to use the right model for the job, choosing the wrong one will give you wrong answers most of the time.... the real problem is that sometimes you can get the right answer from the wrong model just because the numbers work out... and when you have to show your work you lose credit for using the wrong method but still getting the right numerical answer. that is what i see here, someone has started with a simplified case that just happens to work out to the same answer and has tried to generalize it... -10 points for the wrong method! [snip] Dave: I disagree, I feel that for measurements and calculations involving the impedance matching dynamics at any reference plane in such systems the differences between lumped and distributed systems is trivial and unimportant. The impedance matching dynamics at the reference plane/junction point are the same for distributed and lumped systems, they obey all the same equations, their electrodyanamics is the same, one simply cannot tell the difference at the driving point. If you don't like lumped models, then make the internal resistance of the Thevenin generator out of a distributed line. It will work just the same way. The disagreements that occur when there are discussions/arguments occur because folks often assume they are different situations, but they are not. Every line has a driving point impedance of Zo and at that point the voltage and current are related by Ohms Law v = Zo*i just as for a lumped system of impedance Zo. It simply doesn't matter if Zo is lumped or distributed when making observations at the driving point. And this is what one is doing when making impedance matching calculations. I agree that if you move off down the line in distance/space that you will find differences, but you certainly can't observe them at the driving points. A slotted line device for measuring VSWR is a physical example of a measurement system that works on a distributed system that won't work for a lumped system. However you can exactly correlate the measurements taken with the slotted line to measurements taken at the driving point. And so, although I agree with you that some can't seem to be able to see that these situations are the same, I don't agree that makes them different. They are the same at the driving point. -- Peter K1PO Indialantic By-the-Sea, FL. |