"Richard Clark"  wrote 
  To date in this matter, I have yet to see any concrete value of source 
  Z offered from those of the NOT 50 Ohms camp.  Further, I have yet to 
  see any of them offer any experimental confirmation of their assertion 
Richard Fry wrote: 
 Below is a quote from a paper titled "A Study of RF Intermodulation 
Between 
 FM Broadcast Transmitters Sharing Filterplexed or Co-located Antenna 
 Systems," by Geoffrey Mendenhall. (clip).  Quoting Mendenhall, "...If the 
 source impedance were equal to the fifty ohm line impedance, half of the 
 transmitter's output power would be dissipated in its internal output 
source 
 impedance..." 
Walter Maxwell wrote 
 The last sentence in the paragraph above is incorrect.  This shows that 
  the writer of the quote is in the unbelievably large group that still 
believes 
 incorrectly that half of the tx power would be lost if if it were 
conjugately 
 matched. But we all know that efficiencies greater than 80% is achieved 
 by Class C amps, and greater than 60%  is achieved by Class B amps 
 when the source impedance of the tx is 50 ohms resistive and the load 
 impedance is also 50 ohms resistive. 
_______________ 
 
To Walter Maxwell: 
 
1.  You may be interested in reading Mendenhall's complete paper, which I 
will email to you.  The lab measurements reported in it used two, operating, 
high-power FM broadcast transmitters -- and support his statements about 
amplifier source impedance and its consequences. 
 
2.  I will ask again, if transmitters have a 50 ohm source impedance, what 
accounts for the fact that TV ghosts are produced by an antenna system 
reflection having a sufficient delay time?  Calculations and measured data 
show that the energy that produced the ghost originated by re-reflection off 
the TV transmitter output stage of far-end reflections in the antenna 
system.  If the tx source impedance was 50 ohms, it would absorb the far-end 
reflection, which would be incapable of producing a ghost image. 
 
Further, if the tx source impedance was 50 ohms, then the RF intermodulation 
measured and reported in Mendenhall's paper -- and verified in real-world 
installations by the radiated interference those IM products produced -- 
would not occur. 
 
RF 
 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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