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[AMPS] The Worldwide, No Holds Barred, SWR Quiz.

To: <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: [AMPS] The Worldwide, No Holds Barred, SWR Quiz.
From: measures@vcnet.com (measures)
Date: Tue, 5 Oct 1999 01:26:36 -0700
>
>measures wrote:
>> 
>///snip///
> >>
>> >> ?  How do these standing waves remain invisible to the SWR meter at the
>> >> halfwave measuring point?
>> >> >......
>> >
>> >I think only you say they do.
>> >I didn't.
>> >
>> ?  If  "The Z looking into the cable is 50 ohms", how can there be
>> standing waves at that point?
>> 
>> later, Mike
>> 
>> -  Rich..., 805.386.3734, www.vcnet.com/measures.
>----------------
>Hi Rich,
>I think the main problem here is a lack of understanding as to what a
>standing wave is.  It is simply a voltage or current on a line that
>changes amplitude  as you move from one end of the line to the other. 
>This is due to the Z mismatch at the load/transmission line junction.
>Using your example of a 50 ohm load & 93 ohm line:
>with 100 watts output from the generator the voltage at the generator
>end of the 93 ohm 1/2 wavelength line will be 70.71 volts @ 1.414 amps.
>ExI = 100  E/I = 50 ohms.
>
OK 

>At the 1/4 wavelength point on the line the voltage will be 131.52 volts
>@ .77 Amps and 90 dgr phase angle.  The Z at this point on the line is
>172.98 ohms...  eI=100  e/i= 172.98 ohms and the max E/ min E =
>131.52/70.71 = 1.86 = VSWR
>
?  indeed.  So when the 50-ohm SWR meter is moved from either end of the 
halfwave section to the 1/4 wavelength / midpoint, the SWR increases from 
1:1 to 1.86:1.  .  This is why SWR measurement is an inexact science.  

>At the antenna end of the line the voltage is again 70.71 v and the
>current is 1.414 Amps  which gives 100 watts and 50 ohms.  93 ohm
>feedline / 50 ohm load = 1.86:1 SWR.
>
?  ... as measured with a 93-ohm swr meter.  When measured with a 50-ohm 
swr meter, the swr is 1:1.   //  The 93-ohm half wavelength section is 
more than a simple transmission line.  It is effectively a 
reactance-reversing, impedance-repeating, resonant transformer. 

>So, The Z looking into the cable is simply the voltage / current at that
>point on the line.  If you measure the voltage and current and
>associated phase angles with a scope and the appropriate probes you will
>see a single voltage and a single current at each measurement point.
>
?  Agreed, Bob

-  Rich..., 805.386.3734, www.vcnet.com/measures.  


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