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Ralph, all,
On 21/07/2020 22:52, Ralph Mowery wrote: Well actually this is a bit strange, because a ham usually has to pass an exam, and the theory that has to be learned from that usually includes the basic principles of HF electronics, including a discussion of things like L/C circuits, Q factor, skin effect, etc. But maybe you only did a crash course and pre-learned the 500 questions and their correct answer, without actually understanding it. The test of the last 20 or 30 years have been a joke. Anyone with a memory can pass those without knowing anything. Well, I have this discussion a number of times. (I man a infobooth to promote amateur-radio at FOSDEM -a yearly conference on open-source development in Brussels- so I get to explain this quite a lot) In essence, that is not the problem with the exam itself. When explaining to people why you need to do an exam for amateur-radio, I compare this to a drivers-license. A drivers-license is to show that you are technically capable to drive a car on the public road in a way that is safe for yourself and others on the road. This is very similar to the the amateur-radio exam: it is to make sure that you have sufficient technical knowledge to transmit without interfering with other radio-users and to make sure you do not blow up yourself. The only additional element here is that we are not only allowed to drive a car, but to also build one ourself; so, you have to show you are technically able to build a basic model of a transmitter. So, in essence, the exam still serves it goal: allow all users of the radio-spectrum operate without to much "bumping into each-other". But there is very different problem: The problem is that radio-technology nowadays is nowhere near the technology when the exams where conceived. I did my exam in 1992 (when I was in the 2nd year of what would now be a professional bachelor (digital) electronics). I do not think that the exam has really changed in that 28 years. The "problem" is that technology DID really change. Electronics is now a lot more digital and software, and -especially- the way you do electronics has changed dramatically. I think the exam in Belgium now has just two questions one SDR, one asking of a drawing is a FIR filter and one asking if it is a IIR filter. (and yes, most people just learn it by heart: "is there is line going back from the last block of the drawing to the beginning, , it's answer 2. If not, it is answer 1). In essence, the problem is that the amateur-radio exam requires you to know how to build a car ... a basic model of a car: chassis, 4 wheels, engine, breaks, suspension, fuel, .... However, the reality is that a car build in 2020 is 100 times more complex than that basic model. A modern car is filled with hundreds of sensors and as many microcontrollers that all talk together over any number of CAM-bus. After all, the goal is that -if the driver hits the break and the sensors in the wheels notice that the car is losing grip- some device will take over and -based on the input of a myriad of other sensors determining the state of the car- and try to keep the car going in a direction the driver wants it to go. In amateur-radio terms, almost any device you buy or build these-days is driven by DSP, SDR, microcontrollers, FPGAs, etc. We use plutoSDRs to transmit to QO100, arduino's to drive a PLL as a cheap WSPR beacon in a 3d-printed case and a raspberry-pi as signal-generator for DATV. And the exam does not reflect that. Should it do that? Should there be a question on the amateur-radio exam: "please provide a general overview of the hardware and software for a POCSAG paging transmitter using either an arduino + FM transmitter or a si4332 radio-chip"? I don't think so. .. that is simply not the goal of the exam. But, the problem is that, if you do not require this knowledge for the exam, 99 % of the amateur-radio community is completely clueless on how modern telecommunication-equipment works internally. So either they do not care "I'm just an operator and I know how to use my radio", or they have a very vague idea of how it works. As explained, my interest here is to learn. Antenna's are not my speciality (as you can guess). I learned about them in school (which was good enough to pass the ham-radio exam) but that does not mean I "understand" it. In fact, it was a presentation of my former teacher in our radio-club on the nanovna, the video of a talk by Dr. KC Kerby-Patel at MIT about antenna's beginning this year and a discussion I had at FOSDEM with a somebody working in the physics department of a university that made me for the first time see an antenna in the context of "energy". I have been playing around with the Java tool Jeff pointed out (I'm also trying to really understand the article he has provided) and been playing around with a couple of xnec2 simulations. I kind-of favour the idea that this loss is pure related to the practice components (as Jeff and Jeff have said), but I do not understand how this matches up with a statement that the resistance of a shortened antenna is less then a that of a full-size antenna. Concerning the skin-effect, I did read some information on it, and just tried the tool that John has provided (I already had that formula so it saves me time having to do the calculations :-) ), but the problem is that the result does not really say that much. What does a skin-effect depth of 24.46 μm (copper, 7.1 MHz) say concerning additional resistance to an antenna-system and how to does this compare to other resistive elements in the antenna-system and the overall behaviour? As said, there is a difference between "having learned" and "understanding". 73 kristoff - ON1ARF |
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