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Tom Donaly wrote:
The key words are "infinitesimally thin," and "generally assumed." With you, Cecil those words become just "thin," and "dead certain." Kraus is using author-speak as most technical authors do to avoid nit-picking from people like you. Balanis uses the words, "very small" for the wire diameter. I'm glad you clarified that for us. I was beginning to wonder about Kraus. Now I know it's just Kraus' message suffering from Cecil distortion. It is true for infinitesimally thin wire *AND* anything close to that condition, i.e. also true for d lamda, according to Balanis who says: "If the diameter of each wire is very small (d lamda), the ideal standing wave pattern of the current along the arms of the dipole is sinusoidal with a null at the end." The diameter of #18 wire is certainly very small compared to a wavelength at 80m (0.003' 246') ensuring that the standing wave current distribution on the real world dipole is sinusoidal within a certain degree of real world accuracy. If you want to see the sinusoidal current waveform for yourself, observe the current distribution reported by EZNEC for a G5RV used on 20m. Anyone with EZNEC, presumably including W7EL, can observe that sinusoidal standing wave current pattern. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
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