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On Fri, 03 Oct 2003 21:41:15 GMT, Walter Maxwell wrote:
Richard, I'm dismayed with your statements above. Are you really serious? Or are you just giving Cecil a bad time? That wouldn't take much to push Cecil off dead center. I've been grappling with your last email to me concerning the nature of the source resistance of RF amps, and as with your statements above, I'm at a loss as to how to respond, because we are 180 degrees apart on the source resistance issue. I'm still going to respond to it, but right now I want to address the SWR issue. Richard, how can you possibly believe that the output impedance of the source has any effect on the SWR on a transmission line? Stephen Adam of HP using Beatty describes it quite well. The data you have by email and has been posted here demonstrates it equally well. It takes no more than two resistors and a length of line to confirm or deny. My data confirms it, absolutely no one has offered negative evidence, simply denials. The only conditions responsible for SWR are the Zo of the line and the ZL of the load--nothing else. I've been bench measuring SWR for more than 50 years, beginning with using the slotted line before more sophisticated machinery was available. It didn't matter what the source impedance was, the SWR remained the same, whatever the source. Ian told it like it is, and so does Walter C. Johnson in his "Transmission Lines and Networks, Page 100, where he says: If Walter Johnson was not explicit about it, he was certainly implicit about the requirement that the source match the line it is driving for any discussion of SWR. This is so commonplace that no one ever examines the situation where the source is a mismatch. Too many here simply flip to the section in their favorite book about SWR and wholly neglect the fundamentals that present this simple requirement. I have presented quotes, chapter and verse from Chipman where he explicitly says as much, and those who hold Chipman have abandoned discussion rather than refute those quotes or accept their error. As one scribbler put it I was not going to "change his mind." I have no doubt of that, such a statement paints one into an extremely embarrassing corner once having uttered it. One thing I learned as a Metrologist is that I am always wrong, the significance is in the degree of error, not the philosophy of sin and the rejection in ignorance. Any number of correspondents here "might" have the capacity to simply repeat my methods and report their data; but absolutely none demonstrate it. I might be so far in error the meter is pegged, but the quality of "sneer review" absolves me of sin. ;-) Hi Walt, I await your response by email for our last round of discussion. What is presented above is old material already discussed. There is nothing new presented by me in it that has not found its way to your mailbox. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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