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![]() wrote: The fact you can't understand simple direct answers does the same. I love simple answers, Tom. What I don't like are simple-minded answers based on an invalid model. When Roy measured current (and I did the same) using inductive coupling in a current trasformer, a method that requires a time-varying current to excite the secondary, you dismissed Roy's measurements with some odd response about him measuring current that doesn't flow. The inductive coupling does NOT require a time-varying current. All it requires is a time-varying H-field. That standing wave H-field is indeed varying but it's not because current is moving laterally up or down the wire. That H-field is fixed at a point on the line exchanging energy with the E-field which is also fixed at the same point. If the H-field is not moving laterally up or down the wire (it isn't) then the current is NOT flowing. You must have missed that day in your fields and waves class. Take a metal rod. Slip a string through a washer and tie it. Loop the string onto the metal rod. Put a grommet on the rod on each side of the string to keep it in one place in the X dimension on the wire. Now, keeping the X dimension fixed, swing the loop in the plane of the Y and Z dimensions and look at it on edge. You are looking at a physical analogy of the standing wave current at a point on a wire. Is the string moving? Not in the X dimension which is constant and fixed by the grommets. At any point on a wire with standing waves, the E-field and H-field are not moving laterally up and down the wire. They are *stationary* at a point on the wire. All that is happening at that point is the E-field and H-field are swapping energy at the RF frequency. The current probe naturally picks up those stationary oscillating fields. You and Roy still don't understand what it was that was being measured.The current that you and Roy measured was not flowing. It was just standing there. That's why they call it a *standing* wave. The currents that are required to be constant through the coil are the traveling-wave currents. A standing wave is not at all a wave in the classic definition of EM waves. It is simply a superposition of two classic EM waves flowing in opposite directions. Here's an optical example of what is happening to you. The yellow light coming from your TV is an interference pattern between red, blue, and green light. You are measuring yellow light thinking that's a primary color. It is not. But you could use your yellow light measurement to estimate the strength of the primary colors. The standing-wave current is an interference pattern caused by superposition of forward and reflected current waves. Like the yellow light you are seeing, it is not primary, and like the yellow light, it is an artifact of interference.. In a wire in which one amp is flowing in one direction and one amp is flowing in the opposite direction, there is no net flow of current. Therefore, standing wave current has no net flow. That is obvious from its constant, fixed phase angle which doesn't change (much). I already measured the phase of current, and it is nearly zero degrees. The measured phase of the net standing wave current is near zero degrees whether a coil exists or not. All it means is that the net standing wave current is standing still. Basing your conclusions upon measurements of a current that is not even flowing is foolish. I don't know what others think, but it is starting to look to me like you either don't understand the basics of measurements or you are just unwilling to learn. You have been seduced by your model that is known to fail in the presence of standing waves. Why you cling to such a false prophet in the real world is beyond me. I can measure that. My network analyzer measures time delays. The problem I see is if I take time from my busy schedule and measure it, you will either call me a liar or say I measured current that doesn't flow. If you measure a traveling wave current, you will be measuring a current that is actually flowing. Your S12 phase shift measurement showed a -60 to -70 degree phase shift in a 100uH coil at one MHz. That measurement of yours has already proved that your lumped-circuit model is invalid. Why didn't you just use the zero degrees predicted by the lumped-circuit model instead of measuring it? :-) Before measuring anything specific I'm going to warn you that I've measured group delays many times before, and the group delay in an inductor is significantly less than the group delay in a transmission line of the same conductor length. I know that from past experience. I know that, Tom. The point is: If there is any appreciable delay through the coil, that fact violates the presuppositions of the lumped- circuit model. Therefore, a lumped-circuit model cannot be used to explain the characteristics of that real-world coil and especially not in a standing wave environment. But if you promise to control yourself and not dismiss a measurement with personal attacks or insults, and promise to not do an about-face like you did with Roy and say "you really didn't measure current that moves with your thing that only measures changing current", I will do that. I appreciate that and I would also appreciate it if you didn't pencil whip the results before reporting them. Please just be honest. I assume we are both after the truth. And be sure to measure a coil something of the size of a 75m bugcatcher coil. I think a 75m bugcatcher coil would show more of a delay than a toroidal inductor of the same inductive reactance. I really wish some of your ideas were correct. If they were correct, I would not have thousands of feet of coaxial cables coiled under my bench. I would not be forcing customers to cut long delay lines when their equipment could just use a simple wound up piece of enameled wire. Surely, you are familiar with helical transmision lines with a very, very small velocity factor. And Intel does use simple coils as delay lines in some of their PCB designs. Does ANYONE on this newsgroup understand Cecil? I need help here. They are there, Tom. But they just don't want to tangle with a junk yard dog. Most people don't have a thick enough skin to withstand your onslaughts. I get a couple of emails a week from those guys. One distinguished gentleman and well known ham said that you have never lost an argument, even when you were wrong. I know exactly what he means. What a silly statement. We are measuring a time-varying current that doesn't flow or change! It's magnitude changes but it indeed doesn't flow or change phase. It's magnitude changes because the E-field and H-field are continuously exchanging energy at the frequency of operation. If you understood the implications of a constant, fixed, unchanging phase, you would know that. Yes, if he wrote what you quoted and you didn't lift something out of context I totally disagree with him. So be it. Your lumped-circuit model is known to fail in the presence of standing waves. Nonsense. YOUR LUMPED-CIRCUIT MODEL IS KNOWN TO FAIL IN THE PRESENCE OF STANDING WAVES! What is it about that statement that you don't understand? Your lumped-circuit model presupposes conditions that don't exist in a standing wave environment. Therefore, it is invalid and another more powerful model must be chosen.Because your chosen model is invalid, the validity of everything you say is questionable. The lumped-circuit model is a subset of the distributed-network model. The distributed-network model is a subset of Maxwell's equations. If you don't understand the limitations of the model, you will choose to use it under the wrong circumstances. That's what you, Roy, and others have done. -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP |
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