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, D Peter Maus wrote: Telamon wrote: In article , D Peter Maus wrote: Telamon wrote: In article , D Peter Maus wrote: Telamon wrote: In article , D Peter Maus wrote: Telamon wrote: In article , D Peter Maus wrote: RHF wrote: On Dec 30, 9:37 pm, D Peter Maus wrote: Brian wrote: I finally got a house out in the woods on five acres and I'm going to set up a couple of pretty long wires and my Wellbrook ALA-1530. I've pretty much decided on RG-6 for a couple of 150 ft. runs because the stuff's dirt cheap and I can pick it up at the local Home Depot. Is the impedance mismatch here going to be negligible, or should I just bite the bullet and go with RG-8 or a similar 50 ohm coax? -Brian - Alone, your receiver won't care. I doubt that the Wellbrook would, - either. - As a complex, however, you're going to have not one mismatch, - but - two. One at the output of the Wellbrook loop, and one at - the input - of - the antenna interface. This may result in standing waves on the - transmission line which, in turn may result in irregularities in - performance. - - With a reasonably well designed receiver, you'll likely not - notice - any losses in practical listening. And unless you are working at the - very limits of performance on signals very far down in the noise and - doing A/B tests of one coax over another, you'll not detect the - performance irregularities. - DPM, Then it becomes a Practical Implementation and CBA type Problem. CBA = Cost Benefit Analysis http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost-benefit_analysis http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implementation Cost of RG58/RG8 Coax Cable -versus- Cost of RG6 Quad-Shield Coax Cable with a 75-to-50 Ohm Matching Transformer at each end. Starting with the Concept of a 9:1 Matching Transformer for General Broad-Band Shortwave Radio (High Frequency 3~30 MHz) Use and Application with 30 Turns (9-Side) and 10 Turns (1-Side) and the Same Ferrite Core Material : We now need a Matching Transformer to take the Antenna and Radios SO-239 Jack/Plugs {BNC Connector Optional} -to- the 75 Ohm Coax Cable with an F-Connector {BNC Connector Optional} . The 50 Ohm 10 Turns (1-Side) should be understood. Getting to the 75 Ohm (X-Side) should be simple Math : 75 / 50 = 1.5 Square Root of 1.5 = 1.225 Therefore the 75 Ohm (X-Side) would have 12 Turns. A 75 Ohm to 50 Ohm [1.5:1] Matching Transformer would have 12 Turns (1.5-Side) and 10 Turns (1-Side) and the Same Ferrite Core Material -as- 9:1 Matching Transformer for General Broad Band Shortwave Radio (High Frequency 3~30 MHz) Use and Application. Anyone Else Have Any Ideas : On a Building Your Own {DIY} a 75 Ohm to 50 Ohm [1.5:1] Matching Transformer ? - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The Next Question Becomes : At What Cost ? * Are the 75 Ohm to 50 Ohm [1.5:1] Matching Transformers commercial available ? - a Ready Made Item ? Price ? * Are the 75 Ohm to 50 Ohm [1.5:1] Matching Transformers a Low Cost "Built-it-Yourself" Item ? - DIY Price ? - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - DPM - I go back to your first statement : "Alone, your receiver won't care. I doubt that the Wellbrook would, either." IMHO - For the vast majority of Shortwave Radio Listeners (SWLs) Practical Implementation Says : Just Do It ! - Use the RG6 Coax Cable -and- enjoy listening to your radios - iane ~ RHF . Which was precisely my point. It's dumb to buy cable or anything else that is not matched to the task unless there is some kind of over riding factor such as cost. In your universe, and mine, yeah, you buy the best, brightest, matched, optimized, or NFL approved. Truth is, that in real world operations within the normal parameters hobbyists achieve, there is likely no detectable difference between the 'correct' choice, and the most economical choice for transmission line in this application. And given that the OP was concerned about cost, his choice is a decent one. And unless the OP is intending to operate his system at the limits of performance, any losses incurred will not be relevant to his operation. Would I do it that way? No. Would you do it that way? I'm thinking not. But we're in a different position to make these decisions. And we both have the hardware to not only notice the difference in antenna/transmission line performance, but we operate closer to the limits than the OP. For you and me, the choice of coax may well make a detectable difference. In my case, it would also bother me to install a line that I knew wasn't correct for the application. There are others here with the same attention to detail. And still others who will not hear or detect the differences. You're running RX-340. The minutiae at the antenna can be heard. It's not the case when the best receiver you've ever encountered is Sat-800. Well, yes performance is a critical parameter but I would not frame the discussion around a high performance radio. The radio I own is not the issue as ANY table top radio will be adversely affected in reception performance. The performance issue that will affect ANY radio is due to a recombination of forward and reflected waves that run the gamut of reinforcement to cancelation. Where reinforcement or cancelation of incoming signals will occur will depend on several factors and as a consequence not easy to calculate. You may not ever hear a signal on some frequency because that is where the cancelation occurs. The cancelation has to happen somewhere in the frequency band. If you never listen to that spot or spots then no problem but if it happens where you want listen then tough luck. Not every receiver will detect such cancellations at this operating level, and with this magnitude of mismatch. Noise floor, location and ambient noise will render some antenna losses irrelevant in practical listening, and depening on frequency. If you're not working at the limits of performance, small mismatches in a receiving transmission line are trivial. We're not talking about military grade monitoring of picowatt signals, here. This is not about scale. The signal can be very large and go to zero at some frequencies. You are familiar with the Bose noise canceling headphones? Same principle applies here. It IS about scale. And no, it's not the same principle. Noise cancelling headphones seek to remove all the noise. So, the antiwave is of an amplitude approximately equal to the incoming noise. The losses in a receiving antenna transmission line with a small mismatch don't produce anywhere near that level of cancellation. A small mismatch produces a small reflection. A small reflection only produces a partial cancellation. A partial cancellation produces a lower incoming signal at the partial cancellation frequency... the difference being recovered by the sensitivity of the receiver and it's low noise floor. Unless the hobbyist is operating at the limits of performance, that difference will may never be noticed. Snip Have you calculated this? Have you considered that the coax will not behave as a transmission line but will resonate as part of the antenna system is it is not terminated at its characteristic impedance on both ends? Yes, I have considered that. Again, any resonances based on the small mismatch at the levels involved will be small. OK, you keep on believing that. Remember you have a mismatch on both ends of the cable. -- Telamon Ventura, California |