Real PA designs are very far from correctly reverse terminating the transmission line. The maximum power transfer theorem is a complete red herring in this sort of situation. For example, on the top of page 12 of the third edition of the Art of Electronics, immediately after setting the maximum transfer theorem as an exercise, they point out that ordinary output stages are operated far from that condition.

The only case in which you might get reverse termination, is if there was a (typically ferrite) isolator. In that case, the PA wouldn't care about the mismatch (at least not for an ideal isolator), but the terminating resistor in the isolator might glow red or white if you shorted or opened the output. In practice they are normally microwave devices, but I suppose they may be used in professional HF systems.

In real systems, most of the reflected power bounces straight back out again when it hits the PA, to get another chance to be lost in the feeder, or even radiated. Of course this may cause the PA to run out of volts, or gain, and clip or distort, or exceed the safe operating area, and melt bond wires, or destroy the chip itself.

--
David Woolley Owner K2 06123

On 22/04/17 05:47, John Perlick wrote:

Well, it might incrementally improve the loss in the coax because the reflected 
wave from a high SWR antenna would not be the-reflected at the amp.  It would 
be fully absorbed into the amp which is well matched.


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