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From: John Smith on Tues 9 Aug 2005 22:19
Len: I must admit, I am not aware of any of that, attempts to use HF on power lines, or even VHF... but I have not kept up at all... that doesn't sound wacky, it sounds impossible to me... However, I would't even attempt to get a 1.750Mhz signal down power wiring, the capacitance between windings, shielding in all those xfrms along the way, underground power lines, ground shielding in between windings, wiring wound around in conduit boxes, etc, etc... I can understand all of that. However, the nature of transmission lines is that they appear (to source and termination) as extremely-long, quite-low-cutoff-rate L-C lowpass filters. If the source output impedance and the termination input impedance are the same as the transmission lines' characteristic impedance, maximum power flow happens. The MAJOR problem with ANY transmission line environment is DISCONTINUITIES...anything along the line path that upsets the characteristic impedance, usually a physical size thing but can be a change in conductor material, addition of a dielectric in the Transverse ElectroMagnetic (TEM) field, and similar. ANY discontinuity will produce a reflection to the wavefront and increases the VSWR (Voltage Standing Wave Ratio). Note: I use "VSWR" where most hams use "SWR." That's industry practice and relates to the method of measurement, by voltage instead of some means of measuring power (for direct SWR). All ham-used "SWR" meters really measure RF voltage in/out, thus they measure VSWR, but indicators are automatically converting the VSWR to "SWR" for some odd kind of apparent tradition. My first degree was in EE. From what I remember, take a damn idiot to expect those freqs to go any distance at all--the capacitive loading is going to start looking like a direct short to ground I would expect! Especially at 80Mhz! And that, even if the modem puts out a 1KW output! There are some remote 60Hz users out there. The inductance of that wiring is going to look staggering to multi-Mhz signals, I would think--no one is going to be able to control the impedance of that feedline. Really, I would have to see it to believe it, will keep my eyes open, now you have me interested. Well, I "cheated" in that I took two semesters (at night) of microwave theory and techniques because that was what I was working in at the time. Taught by an EE with teaching credentials, himself a day worker in microwave engineering at Hughes Aircraft, Culver City, CA. Gave me terrific insight to the behavior of transmission lines, matching, etc. Afterwards I found a McGraw-Hill Schaum's Outline Series on transmission lines by Robert A Chipman (professor of EE at University of Toledo) with many fascinating examples and solved problems on everything from electric power transmission at 60 Hz to waveguide power transmission at GigaHertzes. [out of print now but the 230+ pages of 8 1/2 x 11 inch soft- bound cost a mere $4.95 in the early 1970s] Made good use of that Chipman text in later formal EE class work...saved my mind from having to "re-invent the wheel" (as most beginners do) in order to get the beloved academic *credits*. :-( Most residential areas in the USA have above-ground electric power distribution. With those, it is relatively easy to just look and estimate the conductor size, their spacing, and get a rough idea of the characteristic impedance of two-wire open wire transmission lines. Then look along the 4 KV distribution route and see where the spacings change, the connections to step-down transformers occur (and at what intervals), the cross-overs and half-loop jumpers as the line has to turn corners, splices, whatever. Usually there will be places where the line spacings deliberately come closer or spread for whatever mechanical reasons. All are discontinuities. At RF, most pole transformers present a high impedance to the 4 KV distribution line. Those can be thought of as "parallel bridgings" (as in video signal distribution) or like the common "capacitance tap" of older TV cable coax distribution. They don't affect the main transmission line much at all. From what I understand of BPL practice, the broadband service couplers go around the pole transformer and go directly to the subscriber drop with appropriate HV protection, etc. How they do that is irrelevant...like the "capacity tap" of TV cable subscriber drop pick-off, it won't affect the main distribution route. ALL THE OTHER DISCONTINUITIES WILL affect the "characteristic impedance" of this BPL transmission line. Where discontinuities exist physically, there WILL BE RADIATION of the BPL signal sidebands. That will happen on every single RF transmission line ever built/installed/debugged/whatever. Now, 300Hz to vlf is great, and there would be tolerable line attenuation due to impedance from line inductance, the resistance of the wire would then become one of largest losses, if not the largest. In special cases, where line length ended up being a resonate or near-resonate length, might even have a signal in need of attenuation at the ISP. I have no idea what-so-ever of how "long wire antennas" of that magnitude behave like... and as a transmission line! Krist, I am worried about how much signal I am getting though 250+ feet of aging coax! Whether coaxial cable or open-wire line, ALL transmission lines have attenuation increasing with increasing frequency. For new cable the "db per 100 foot" column can be consulted for what it was when new in your 250-foot case. Attenuation will increase somewhat with aging but - for coax - that is due mostly to the dielectric polymer material doing some weird polymerization depending on its original quality and composition. Big difference in polyethylenes, very little difference with tetrafluoroethylenes (Teflon). Open-wire lines have the least problems with aging, that due mostly to conductor surface oxidation (plating with another, non-oxidizing metal helps that) and accumulation of airborne dirt and crap (which can be cleaned off). Problem with open-wire line is the characteristic impedance is so much higher than coax and thus the RF voltages are proportionally higher. For ANY transmission line ya gotta treat the line as essentially broadband media (but with a slow rate of attenuation at higher frequencies). When the line's characteristic impedance is matched at both ends, everyone is happy. When it ain't, ya get delivered power LOSS with the difference between input and output power being either radiated or absorbed (in something). Mostly that is excess RADIATION...which CAN be measured. With an ideal transmission line (and ideal matching front/back) there isn't any radiation. Power loss is confined to the loss within the line itself (also measureable). The minute you put a discontinuity in that line, there WILL BE RADIATION. low swr |
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