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On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 07:35:35 +0000 (UTC), "Reg Edwards"
wrote: "Walter Maxwell" wrote Will you please describe the details of your experiment where you claim 90% of the power is radiated from the feedline? How did you make this measurement? ================================== Walt, If you erect a 10 meter 1/2-wave dipole and center-feed it with a 50 feet length of coax, and then transmit on 1.9 MHz, 99.9 percent of available power will be radiated from the feedline and only 0.1 percent from the antenna itself. SWR on the line will be about 1400 and the amount of power available will not be very great. ---- Reg. Sorry to disagree, Reg, But if a balun at the feedline-antenna junction is a perfect balun at 1.9 MHz, NO power will be radiated from the feedline with any amount of SWR, even 1400. It is true that only 0.1% of the power will be radiated, but the 99.9% will be reflected back to the input of the line, not radiated,, making a 50-ohm transmitter see a 1400:1 mismatch. In the steady state the transmitter will only deliver 0.1% of its available power into the line due to the mismatch. The 1400 SWR inside the coax will not cause it to radiate, unless the outer conductor is full of holes. Walt |
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