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On Tue, 28 Jun 2005 19:36:53 GMT, james wrote
in : On Tue, 28 Jun 2005 14:36:23 -0400, Scott in Baltimore wrote: The speed of the signal INSIDE the coax (the velocity factor) is slower then the speed of the signal OUTSIDE (on the shield). While 17.21 feet is a quarter wave on the outside of the shield, the inside 1/4 wave is shorter. If you want to see the actual SWR at the feedpoint, then use a 1/2 wave electrical length of coax. This will shift the phase of the mismatch back into it's original position at the other end of the feedline. (I learned all this stuff while I was still a single bander, and still laugh at all the ham's that still believe the coax length BS.) ***** And I have the biggest laugh because most CBers as well as Hams have a peanuts view of what a transmission line is or how signals act on and in them. You can say -that- again..... First off, while the coax can be inside the field of radiation, the signal from the transmitter to the antenna travels solely inside the transmission line. That is between the center conductor and the shield. The energy transmitted travels in the dielectric and it is the dielectric that slows the wave down and casue loses. The energy in a coax travels on the conductors -and- in the dielectric -and- within the magnetic fields. The propogation delay of a line is the combined phase delays of distributed capacitance -and- distributed inductance in the line. The dielectric constant only -seems- to be the determining factor of coax propogation delay because the conductors are straight. IOW, if you replace the center conductor with a coil you will introduce an additional propogation delay into the coax which is -independent- of the dielectric constant (and will have constructed a device known to us old farts as a 'helical resonantor'). Regardless, it has no relevance to this discussion. Even the worst coax, RG-58 has sufficient shield as to not cause leakage through the shield at 27 MHz. Maybe a 10 GHz. but not 27 MHz. Common mode currents occur on the shield and are just that currents. They can come from poor ground connection at the antenna feed point or can be induced currents due to the coax being within the fear feild energy of the antenna. One of the most misunderstood terms in radio is "common-mode current". It simply means that current is moving in the same direction, and in phase, on two or more conductors. It occurs in a coax when current on the -inside- of the shield is in phase with the current on the center conductor. Any RF current on the -outside- of a coax has -nothing- to do with common-mode currents -- it's simply the result of RF spilling out of the coax or being induced onto it from an external field. Often common mode currents are also rich in harmonic energy and that is what reradiates and cause TVI and interference. Hogwash. Harmonics don't just appear because of common-mode currents. They must come from a source -- i.e, the transmitter. And conductors of common-mode currents don't have any magical properties that let them conduct or radiate harmonics any better than the fundamental frequency. That's RF voodoo. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |