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[TowerTalk] Mismatched Antennas and Tuners - Experimental Results

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Subject: [TowerTalk] Mismatched Antennas and Tuners - Experimental Results
From: sbest@cushcraft.com (sbest@cushcraft.com)
Date: Thu, 27 Aug 98 13:43:34

     In an effort to finally end discussion of this topic on the reflector, 
     we conducted an experiment to compare the performance of a matched 
     antenna to that of a mismatched antenna with tuner.
     
     This post is quite long. I hope this does not bother anyone too much.
     
     This is the basic experiment that we conducted:
     
     We first set up an antenna and connected it directly to our 
     transceiver via a coaxial cable.  The antenna was resonant at 21.2 
     MHz, with a measured feedpoint impedance of 39.7 - j0.7 (approx.).  
     This calculates to a VSWR of 1.32:1.  The cable we used had a total 
     matched attenuation of 1.64 dB (approx.).  We used an HP8753E network 
     analyzer to make the attenuation and impedance measurements.  We did a 
     full two port calibration (open, short and load) to calibrate the 
     setup.
     
     We then placed a bird wattmeter at the output of the transceiver, 
     keyed up and set the forward power to 100 Watts using the RF output 
     dial on the transceiver (a 100 W plug-in was used in the meter).  The 
     measured reflected power was less than 1/2 watt.  We then used a bird 
     wattmeter located near the antenna feedpoint to measure a forward 
     power near 70 watts and a reflected power near 0.7 watts.  I am 
     uncertain how accurate the wattmeter really is, +/- 2 watts?  Anyway, 
     based on a theoretical analysis (using 1.64 cable attenuation) we 
     should have delivered about 67.2 Watts of power to the antenna.  The 
     69.3 watts we measured indicates a total cable attenuation of about 
     1.6 dB. This is pretty close to the 1.64 dB attenuation measured and 
     indicates a good measurement and setup.
     
     Next, we detuned the antenna to have a feedpoint impedance of 
     approximately 6.2 + j14.4 ohms. This calculates to a VSWR of about 
     8.74:1.  We then measured the VSWR at the input to the coaxial cable.  
     It was about 3.0:1.  
     
     We then placed an Ameritron manual tuner between the antenna and the 
     transceiver.  We keyed up, and tuned out the reflections.  We verified 
     with the bird wattmeter that we had 100 watts forward power delivered 
     from the transceiver to the tuner.  We then measured forward and 
     reflected power at the output of the tuner.  The forward power was 
     measured to be near 130 watts.  (This was a bit tough as we had to go 
     to the 2500 watt plug-in).  The reflected power was measured to be 27 
     watts (100 W plug-in).  Given these measurements, we would all agree 
     that the steady state power delivered to the transmission line was 
     near 100 Watts.  We did not try to determine the forward loss through 
     the tuner.
     
     We then measured forward and reflected power at the antenna feedpoint 
     terminals.  The forward power was measured at 98 Watts and the 
     reflected power was measured at 62 watts.  The net steady state power 
     delivered to the antenna was measured to be 36 Watts.  This represents 
     a relative steady state loss of about 4.44 dB.  100 Watts input, 36 
     Watts delivered to the antenna. 
     
     I next set out to verify if these measurements were consistent with 
     the analysis and discussion that I have presented over the last week. 
     I also set out to verify if these measurements were consistent with 
     the analysis presented by Walt Maxwell (W2DU) in his book 
     "Reflections".  Remember that in my previous discussions I stated that 
     Walt's and my analysis agreed when we both assumed a lossless 
     transmission line.  I was curious to see how they handled attenuation.
     
     For the analysis, I used an antenna with an 8.74:1 VSWR, a lossless 
     tuner, and a matched transmission line attenuation of 1.64 dB.   
     
     When I used my concepts and analysis techniques (detailed in the 
     article I sent some of you), I calculated the following power 
     distribution within the system:
     
     Initial power delivered to the tuner/transmission line: 70.3 watts
     
     Initial power delivered to the antenna: 17.8 watts
     
     Forward power measured at tuner output:  142.2 watts
     
     Reflected power measured at tuner output:  42.2 watts
     
     Steady state power delivered to the antenna:  35.9 Watts. (17.9 Watts of 
     initial power plus 18.1 Watts of reflection echoes)
     
     These values are certainly close enough to confirm my analysis of the 
     tuner operation and the voltage interactions (including what I call 
     echoes) occurring within the system.  I agree that, in HF amateur 
     communications, the presence of reflection echoes most likely does not 
     disturb signal quality.  However, it is still technically correct to 
     recognize that they exist and that voltages within the system interact 
     in the manner I outlined in previous posts to the reflector.
     
     Next, I pulled out Walt Maxwell's book and went to section 6.3 on 
     reflection gain.  On page 6-9, Walt presents a formula to determine 
     absorbed power by the antenna.  If we use an antenna with an 8.74:1 
     VSWR (rho=0.795) and a matched attenuation of 1.64 dB, Walt's formula 
     calculates the absorbed antenna power to be 35.9 Watts.
     
     Walt and I both agree on the level of steady state power delivered to 
     the antenna.  I believe that only difference in our method is that I 
     present a more detailed discussion of voltages within the system 
     while Walt simply jumps to the end result.  (Walt's book does have 
     more details in the appendix)  Either approach is valid if it is 
     recognized that the total power at the antenna is made up of an 
     initial power plus the power from a number of reflections.
     
     In Walt's book, page 6-7, Walt states that line attenuation is the 
     key to whether the VSWR has any practical impact on efficiency at 
     all.  This statement is true and has been illustrated in the 
     experiment.  With the 8.74:1 antenna mismatch and tuner, we measure 
     the total system attenuation to be about 4.4 dB. 36 Watts are 
     delivered to the antenna with 100 Watts input.  From standard 
     attenuation curves, we can determine that a 1.64 matched cable 
     attenuation will translate into a 4.4 dB attenuation (approx.) due to 
     an 8.74:1 VSWR.
     
     I would like to note that some have posted statements indicating that 
     there will be no measurable difference between a matched antenna and 
     a mismatched antenna/tuner combo, or that the difference would not be 
     significant.  Even with our somewhat low matched attenuation of 1.64 
     dB, an antenna with an 8.74:1 VSWR introduces about 2.8 dB more 
     system loss than a matched antenna due to the increased cable 
     attenuation.
     
     The practical end to all of this is certainly nothing new.  Keep your 
     feedline loss low and your antenna VSWR minimized.
     
     This ends this thread for me.
     
     73
     Steve 
     VE9SRB

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