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Frankly, I haven't paid any attention to your ducking, dodging, and
hand-waving. You haven't been able to produce an analysis showing the voltages, currents, and powers in the same simple circuit I analyzed. As far as I'm concerned, nothing you've posted constitutes a proof of anything. One thing I have gotten from your postings, though, is an appreciation for what you said about your alma mater being a military school. They obviously taught you to always present a moving target, and you learned the lesson well. I return the readers now to tau, s11, n-port networks, optics, virtual photons, and whatever else can be produced to avoid directly facing the stark reality of Ohm's and Kirchoff's laws. Enjoy! Roy Lewallen, W7EL Cecil Moore wrote: Roy Lewallen wrote: The calculation used for reflection coefficient is based on its definition, namely reflected voltage divided by forward voltage. Unfortunately, you did not correctly identify the forward voltage and reflected voltage. V1*tau is only one of the forward voltage components. There is another one, V2*rho. Same for current. Did you see my example where by adding one wavelength of lossless feedline, it can be proven that reflected power can never be greater than forward power? |