I agree with Jim on this point.   I have means to measure current in each side of the balanced feed line.  And I have means to measure the voltage on each leg and observe the phase difference in each leg.  A dual trace scope with 2 current probes is the basic configuration.  If the currents are equal in each leg, and the voltage is equal in each leg, and the phase is 180 degrees between the two legs, the system is well balanced.

As I stated earlier, random installation of an antenna and feed line will likely lead to random and usually unfavorable results. Otherwise, careful installation and positioning of the antenna legs and feed line run produces wonderful results.

73

Bob, K4TAX



On 1/6/2019 8:12 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
A few other  points:  1) the SWR on a feedline is established BY THE ANTENNA, not the transmitter or antenna tuner; 2) feeding an antenna with two-wire line does NOT make it balanced -- most practical antennas that we think of as balanced are often un-balanced by their surroundings -- ground slope, variations in the soil under them, trees, wiring in buildings, unequal height ; 3) off-center-fed antennas are inherently unbalanced.

73, Jim K9YC

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