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#11
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#12
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"David Robbins" wrote in message ...
"Dr. Slick" wrote in message m... (David or Jo Anne Ryeburn) wrote in message .. . ok, i quit... i have shown several times that the calculation of vswr from rho only applies in ideal lines, you can not use it in lossy lines because of the simplifications that went into deriving it. if you insist on harping on this point how can you ever open your eyes to see the rest of the errors in your calculations. 25' of RG-8 isn't THAT lossy. Once again, where and when and how did you do a measurement? When you get a rho greater than 1, the VSWR = (1 + |rho|)/(1 - |rho|) gives ridiculous NEGATIVE SWRs. And rho WILL give you the SWR, assuming your tranmission isn't extremely lossy. This is why people say that the SWR meter has to be at the antenna, instead of at the end of 100' of RG-58. You are quitting because you can't really answer this question. Slick |
#13
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"David Robbins" wrote in message ...
I did read some of Kurokawas paper, and it IS a bit confusing. Have you figured it out David? Please tell us how the conjugate equation was derived. Please explain where the fallacy of my logic lies for you. Slick it wasn't derived, it was defined. formula (1) defines the power waves. formula (11) defines the 'power wave reflection coefficient' in terms of the two waves in (1). it is then just algebra to rearrange the terms to get the formula in (12). Please show us if he correctly defines formula (1) and why. And i'd also like to see if someone can derive these: ai= (Vi+Zi*Ii)/(2*sqrt(Re(Zi)) bi= (Vi-conj(Zi)*Ii)/(2*sqrt(Re(Zi)) For what he calls the incident and reflected power waves. And he does say that this is also the voltage RC when Zi is real and positive. And then he does square the MAGNITUDE of this, to get the Power RC. i have given up on convincing any one on here that this equation can not be applied to voltage and current waves on lossy lines. unfortunately it will give the right answers but for the wrong reason on ideal lines. so go read the paper, understand what he is doing, and realize that it is a different domain than the 'classical' voltage and current waves that have been used for many years and work just fine. You are giving up because you don't understand the paper either. Slick |
#14
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#15
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![]() "Dr. Slick" wrote in message om... "David Robbins" wrote in message ... "Dr. Slick" wrote in message m... (David or Jo Anne Ryeburn) wrote in message .. . ok, i quit... i have shown several times that the calculation of vswr from rho only applies in ideal lines, you can not use it in lossy lines because of the simplifications that went into deriving it. if you insist on harping on this point how can you ever open your eyes to see the rest of the errors in your calculations. 25' of RG-8 isn't THAT lossy. Once again, where and when and how did you do a measurement? When you get a rho greater than 1, the VSWR = (1 + |rho|)/(1 - |rho|) gives ridiculous NEGATIVE SWRs. And rho WILL give you the SWR, assuming your tranmission isn't extremely lossy. This is why people say that the SWR meter has to be at the antenna, instead of at the end of 100' of RG-58. You are quitting because you can't really answer this question. Slick you really are hopeless... that formula for VSWR is not valid when the line has losses, and you can only get rho 1 when the line has losses.... see the catch 22???? |
#16
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"David Robbins" wrote in message ...
Please show us if he correctly defines formula (1) and why. And i'd also like to see if someone can derive these: ai= (Vi+Zi*Ii)/(2*sqrt(Re(Zi)) bi= (Vi-conj(Zi)*Ii)/(2*sqrt(Re(Zi)) For what he calls the incident and reflected power waves. re-read my reply above until you understand it... (1) is GIVEN, it is the starting point, he DEFINED ai and bi to be those values... the then goes on for several paragraphs explaining why he thinks those are better waves than other types of waves. Well, I certainly didn't expect you to provide the derivation, but maybe someone else can. And there is the point that if Zi is real and positive, the power wave is actually a voltage wave. Slick |
#17
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![]() "Dr. Slick" wrote in message om... "David Robbins" wrote in message ... Please show us if he correctly defines formula (1) and why. And i'd also like to see if someone can derive these: ai= (Vi+Zi*Ii)/(2*sqrt(Re(Zi)) bi= (Vi-conj(Zi)*Ii)/(2*sqrt(Re(Zi)) For what he calls the incident and reflected power waves. re-read my reply above until you understand it... (1) is GIVEN, it is the starting point, he DEFINED ai and bi to be those values... the then goes on for several paragraphs explaining why he thinks those are better waves than other types of waves. Well, I certainly didn't expect you to provide the derivation, but maybe someone else can. no, no one can derive something that is defined... it is a given. it is the author's choice to define waves the way he wants, and then to define whatever he wants to all his reflection coefficient from those waves. that does not mean it can be generalized to other waves. the waves defined that result in the normal reflection coefficient happen to be a simple solution to a second order partial differential equation that results when you analyze the voltage or current waves in a transmission line.... a different type of wave, requiring a different reflection coefficient... and never the twain shall meet! |
#18
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#19
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"Dr. Slick" wrote:
wrote in message ... The passive network you provided in your first post fulfills this requirement if you define 'power RC' as |rho|^2. I disagree that the voltage RC will be greater than 1. The tricky part is measuring this correctly, because you would need an SWR meter that is calibrated for the same Z as Zo. It is not nearly that tricky. 'Revised' rho, as you state, predicts 0 Volts across the capacitor. This will be easy to measure with any AC voltmeter that can handle your test frequency. I predict, using circuit theory, that if you excite the test circuit with a 1 Volt sinusoid at a frequency that makes the impedances j200 and -j200, that you will measure 4 Volts across the capacitor, not 0. This aligns with the result expected from 'classic' rho. ....Keith PS Please consider dispensing with the insults. They do not further the discussion and are quite unbecoming. |
#20
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