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Reg Edwards wrote:
Reg spoke of the SWR meter as a resistance bridge. It is possible to build a meter that is a bridge =================================== The so-called SWR meter is ALWAYS a resistance bridge (although it may be described in other terms). Utter nonsense. There are numerous ways to measure SWR without using a bridge of any kind. A bridge implementation is mearly a simple and cheap way to do it and hence the most likely to be found in use by a hobbiest. ===================================== I'm sorry to say you are all banging your heads against a brick wall. It feels that way when trying to discuss SWR with you. The so-called SWR meter does NOT measure SWR. Depends on what you call a SWR meter and what you mean by measure, but this has already been hashed to bits. For starters, there is no transmission line on which to measure anything. Can you find one? It is NOT the one which goes between tuner and antenna. It depends on how you implement the hardware to measure SWR, but you are so obsessed with bridge circuits you have little chance of understanding there is more in the world. What do tuners have to do with anything? Tuners are irrelevant to the original post. Are you deliberately trying to confuse the issue or do tuners confuse you? To measure SWR on THAT line the meter has to be located in the air at the antenna end of the line and has to be read using an astronomical telescope mounted on a tripod. But it would still give the wrong answers. Go and think about it some more. I did in EE class about 30 years ago and numerous times since. Guess what, the physics hasn't changed. You are so obsessed on this issue that the small nugget of information you have to offer is swamped by the enormous amount of arm waving and babble. ---- Reg, G4FGQ -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |