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It's simple, yet too complicated for you to actually do it and show us.
Over the years, I had the unfortunate experience to occasionally meet an engineer for whom everything was very simple. They could never understand why it took the rest of us so long to solve all those really trivial problems. But after watching these folks in action for a while, I noticed that they were somehow never able to actually produce any hardware that actually worked. When pressed, they were very skilled at working themselves into a spot where they wouldn't ever have to actually deliver a working device, changing groups, projects, or responsibilities whenever they got too close to actually having to deliver. One common ploy was to regard the mere creation of a working model beneath their dignity and an unworthy use of their great knowledge. Surely you're not one of those, are you? Roy Lewallen, W7EL Cecil Moore wrote: Roy Lewallen wrote: The "apparent" violation is entirely in your own mind. You claim that the reflected power is greater than the forward power while at the same time the Poynting vector points toward the load. That's an obvious contradiction which can be remedied simply by collecting like terms. -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP |