Many years ago I built a circuit which used op amps to make diodes into "perfect rectifiers" -- rectifiers that would be linear at very low voltages. Antenna analysers also have the same problem. The real problem may be building a rectifier that works at very low voltages when at low power and continues to work at high voltages when at high power.

Cheers - Bill, AE6JV

sOn 12/12/13 at 6:21 PM, [email protected] (Don Wilhelm) wrote:

If all things are perfect, there would be no difference. But in the practical, physical world, there are differences. In the question you have posed, there is the wattmeter diodes to consider. When the forward voltage is quite small, as would be the case at lower power levels, there may not be enough rectified voltage for a good indication of reverse power - that will lead to erroneous results that may cause higher SWR indications when the power is increased.

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Bill Frantz        |Security, like correctness, is| Periwinkle
(408)356-8506 |not an add-on feature. - Attr-| 16345 Englewood Ave www.pwpconsult.com |ibuted to Andrew Tanenbaum | Los Gatos, CA 95032

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