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Hello,
I'd like to start a discussion (or light a brush-fire, as the case may be for this NG!), about what a 50 Ohm impedance match really means. On our trusty Smith Chart, assuming it is normalized to 50 Ohms, the center is considered and labeled as the "real resistive" 50 match point. In fact, the entire middle horizontal line is the "real" part of the impedance. I'm sure many of you have read the popular description/model of a transmission line as an infinite chain of alternating series inductors with shunt capacitors, with the resulting characteristic impedance as Z=(L/C)**1/2, where the L and C are distributed inductances and capacitances. So, in theory, if you have achieved a perfect match with your antenna, you will have matched the impedance to the 377 Ohms of free space, you will not have reflections at the matching point, and the energy will radiate in whatever pattern you have designed for. The funny thing about this, is that you cannot say that the 50 Ohms in the center of the chart is a "resistive" 50 Ohms, as there is very little real resistance in the average antenna. This "resistive" 50 Ohms is really what people call the "radiation" resistance, which is something of a misnomer again, because this is trying to equate the successful impedance matching and subsequent non-reflected EM radiation with a truly real resistance like an ideal dummy load. Of course, it's well known that a truly real resistive 50 Ohm dummy load should appear exactly like a properly matched antenna to the transmitter. Why do i ask all this? Well, if you believe that complex impedance measurements (series equivalent) by MFJ antenna analyzers are not completely inaccurate, then it appears that two 1/4 watt 100 Ohm resistors in parallel (lead lengths short) are a much more consistent 50 Ohms over the VHF band than almost all the higher power dummy loads we have tested. Problem is, the high power dummy loads will vary from 52 to 45 "real" ohms depending on the frequency, with the "real" part of the impedance getting lower with increasing frequency, so it doesn't seem to be a "skin effect". The spread gets much worse when you put a 3' jumper coax in between, and even more worse when you add a power/swr meter. Then the "real" Ohms will be from 65 to 35 ohms, with the max and mins not correlating with frequency at all, and the stray reactances will be much more too, but just as varied with frequency. So much for "50 ohm" jumper cables! I suppose they are as close as they can get them for a particular price. My theory is that the "real" part of the impedance is mainly the truly resistive 50 ohms of the dummy load at low frequencies around 10 MHz or so...but as you go up in frequency, the parasitics of the dummy load and the coax jumper cable will cause "radiation" resistance to be mixed in with this truly real 50 ohms, giving us readings all over the map. What do you folks think? Dr. Slick |
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Conservation of Energy | Antenna |