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I followed it accurately. If the antenna is resonant (frequency) the
impedance drops to a value which is dependant on distance from ground. Away from resonance the impedance goes high. The impedance of a random wire is largely a function of frequency. On Sun, 27 Feb 2005 10:58:57 -0800, "CW" wrote: May have been the orriginal question (actually wasn't, OP really didn't understand the concept) but it wasn't where the conversation led. Try to fallow along. "David" wrote in message .. . Transmission lines have characteristic impedance, non-frequency dependent. Antenna impedance (original question) does have a frequency component. On Sat, 26 Feb 2005 18:25:12 -0800, "CW" wrote: No ****. "David" wrote in message .. . A transmission line is not a generator. On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 17:55:07 -0800, "CW" wrote: Not for it's characteristic impedance. Does your coax have a different impedance at different frequencies? "David" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 24 Feb 2005 07:03:25 GMT, Telamon |
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