Bill,
I'm puzzled at the idea that changing "the impedance the transceiver sees"
wouldn't affect SWR. Isn't SWR the ratio between the impedance seen at the
measurement point vs. the desired impedance at that point? I must not be
understanding your comment.
Anyway, you can certainly change impedance by changing the length of coax,
provided that the coax used does not have the same impedance as the impedance
at the termination point. So if you have a 50 ohm load fed with 50 ohm coax,
it does not matter how long the coax may be, but if you use 75 ohm coax for
part of the feedline, the impedance seen at the transmitter will vary with the
length of the 75 ohm section.
The matching section does not have to be a quarter wavelength long.
73,
Cathy
N5WVR
--------------------------------------------
On Sat, 6/10/17, Bill Turner <dezrat@outlook.com> wrote:
>Tried different lengths of coax between the amp and the radio and still no
better.
REPLY:
The length of coax does not affect SWR unless it is extremely long,
where line loss comes into play. Even then, the effect is to reduce
SWR, not increase it.
It does affect the impedance the transceiver "sees", but not SWR.
73, Bill W6WRT
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