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the voltage on the braid is not zero on the inside, it varies along with the
wave traveling along the inside of the coax. and the currents are exactly balanced inside the coax also, they have to be or it wouldn't work. this notion of balanced vs un-balanced transmission lines is totally confusing to most people, in a proper system, say just with a dummy load on a coax the currents on the shield exactly balance the current on center conductor. so why do we go through all this stuff with bal-uns?? and coax chokes?? the currents are already balanced, so WHY?? come on you gurus out there, explain this one! "Toni" wrote in message ... Thanks four your answers. I was forgetting you normally use coax in a unbalanced configuration where the braid is supposed to be at 0 voltage so only currents matter. Would all this still hold if you used the coax as a _balanced_ transmission line? (unusual but -I think- possible). In this case wouldn't voltages develop on the braid that could capacitively couple to other conductors? (assuming perfect solid shield, ...) -- Toni |
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