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Old July 17th 03, 07:44 PM
Dr. Slick
 
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"Ian White, G3SEK" wrote in message ...

A transducer is any gadget that converts energy from one form into a
*different* form. Examples include a loudspeaker (electrical energy to
sound/mechanical energy), a microphone (the reverse), a light bulb and a
photocell.


It's a useful word for a useful idea.

If an antenna is not a transformer of some type, then why is it
affected by it's surroundings so much? They obviously are, just like
the primary's impedance is affected by what the secondary sees in a
transformer.


That's a perfect example of the trap, because in reality it's not "just
like". An antenna also has E-field interactions with its environment
that a transformer doesn't have, so any resemblance will literally be
only half-true.



Roy has clarified this adequately already.

Ok, I was half correct then. Two transducers make up one
transformer.

Certainly two dipoles very close to one another will affect each
other's impedance.

And a regular transformer with a core can definitely be affected
by a close EM-field.


Slick
 
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