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On Wed, 30 Nov 2005 23:42:33 GMT, Cecil Moore wrote:
Owen Duffy wrote: Well, I think we are agreed that you made a mistake in identifying a mistake, if I am not mistaken! Your original mistake was in making a posting that caused me to misunderstand. :-) Your loss calculator gives 0.762 dB loss for 90 feet of Wireman #445 with an SWR of 12.7:1 on 7.15 MHz. Now, you're trying to trick me... did you mean Wireman 554? It does show 0.76dB for 90' of 554 with a 30+j0 input Z at 7.15MHz. The 0.9dB stated earlier was (as stated) for 552 which had a Zo closer to your 380 ohms, whereas 554 is 360 ohms. The whole excercise goes nowhere, because it seems that the 30 ohms scenario is "hypothetical". I knew it was thirty-something ohms so I said "30". It was actually 38 ohms indicating an SWR at the source of 1.3:1. That's acceptable losses for me. If I used an antenna tuner to achieve a 1:1 match, it would probably be a wash. Which is probably a good question. At what SWR should one install an antenna tuner? My IC-706 seems perfectly happy at 2:1. Given that some radios (including the IC706-IIG) reduce drive power at high VSWR as a protection mechanism, you may want to install an ATU to develop full power output. My recollection is that the power output of the IC706-IIG is significantly down at VSWR=2, but it probably also depends on the actual load impedance. A likely scenario could be that the radio only develops 50W of output, and only 40W makes it to the feedpoint (assuming 1dB feed loss). The ATU might raise that to 100W of output, less tuner loss and feed loss giving 75 to 80W at the feedpoint. Mere fraction of an S point... but if you have a 100W transmitter, might as well use it, and besides, the technical challenge of achieving that goal and measuring the achievement might be part of what amateur radio is about. Owen -- |