Jim, I sent you an email directly. The address copied kinda strange so not sure if you'll get it or not.
Let me know. You'll be interested in reading. Not that long.
Bob? W4JFA
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On Mon, Oct 30, 2023 at 8:30?AM Bob via <W4JFABob=[email protected]> wrote:
Jim, If a 50 ohm coax is NOT terminated into a 50R - j0 load, the impedance will change with length. Somewhat like using a 1/4 wave 75 ohm coax to match/change impedance of
certain antennas. Now some will say that the impedance will change but the SWR does/should not. I have a little write up from a feed line expert
explaining why the SWR does indeed change, just like your 3 foot to 6 foot example changed the SWR.
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Personally I've noticed this change more so on ten meters than lower bands. Makes sense because for example a 3 foot piece of coax is a larger percentage of a wabvelength
on ten meters than on the lower bands.
Bob? W4JFA
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On Sun, Oct 29, 2023 at 2:43?AM Jim VE7RF <jim.thom@...> wrote:
Watch out with length of coax between xcvr + input of the amp.? ? On all 4 of my Drake L4B amps, if coax is 3' long, input swr is flat on all bands.? ?But when I use a 6' jumper, input swr increases to aprx? 1.4:1? or? 1.5:1? ? and no amount of slug tuning will reduce it.? And the Q of the tuned input PI networks on the drake amps is a helluva lot higher? vs a SB-220.? (cap values are higher)
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On my big hb amps, they all use a manually tuned, PI tuned input.? Same deal, but at least I can tune it dead flat.?
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I still have not figured out why the interconnecting coax length affects? input swr.?