Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Reg, G4FGQ wrote:
"Call out the riot police!" And a riotous new year to you too! An SWR meter is a built-in or external circuit which measures the standing-wave-ratio at the transciever end of the feedline. Actually it measures the degree of mismatch which causes SWR. SWR = R/Zo or Zo/R, as required for a quotient1. At the junction of a uniform feedline and a mismatched antenna load, the reflection coefficient is a vector ratio between the electric fields associated with the reflected and incident waves. The magnitude of Rho, the reflection coefficient, is related to VSWR by: Rho = VSWR - 1 / VSWR + 1 So, mismatch produces reflection, the magnitude of which depends on how great the mismatch. The reflected wave traveling back toward the source of the incident wave makes a standing-wave-pattern. SWR is the ratio of the maximum of voltage (or current) along the line if the line is long enough. If not, an SWR may be inferred from the forward and reflected powers for practical purposes. The built-in or external meter that indicates severity of mismatch, is usually labeled "SWR" because the determination was traditionally made by sensing the sum of forward and reverse fields, either electric or magnetic, along the transmission line. The ratio of maximum to minimum is SWR. The meter could have been called a "mismatch meter", but that won`t happen. "SWR meter" is ingrained. "Water Tank" was a code name given the military vehicle by its British developers during WW-1 to maintain secrecy. After they were fielded, attempts were made to no avail to call the vehicles "assault carriages" or "combat cars". "Tank" is the name now and forever. Same with "SWR meter". Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |