For an interesting discussion..."What happens to the power that's reflected?"


On 4/9/2019 3:42 PM, Al Lorona wrote:
There's always a lot of discussion about measuring SWR, low SWR values, SWR 
lights not lighting up, etc. Here's something that might give you a better 
'feel' for SWR.

Imagine that you measure your forward power at 100 W and your reflected power 
at only 1 W. You'd probably be very happy about this. Congratulations, your SWR 
would be 1.22 to 1.

Pause for a moment and let it soak in that an SWR of 1.22 is fabulously good. 
Once you get to this point, below which we're dealing with reflected power 
that's less than 1% of your power, or four-hundredths of a dB, it's not worth 
doing any more to your antenna system to improve it. No trimming, cutting, 
raising, lowering, hanging stuff from it, adding remote tuned things, nothing. 
You're done for the day and can now get on the air!

If the reflected power were 4 W, which would still look pretty small on the 
meter, the SWR would be 1.5 to 1.

A lot of people might be bothered by an SWR of 1.5, but really this is still 
very good and it's probably not worth going back up to the antenna to mess with 
it any more. Most importantly, the station on the other end cannot possibly 
hear the difference between your 1.2 and 1.5.

At this point you may be saying, "Yeah, but my rig/amplifier/other thing isn't happy 
unless the SWR is below 1.5 to 1, so I would still have to do more work."

Okay, that's fine, but my point is that the absolute number 1.5 nonetheless 
represents a system that is working quite well.

Let's allow the reflected power to increase all the way to <gasp> 10 watts! At 
that point, your SWR would be about 2 to 1. Sounds pretty bad, but surely if you were 
stranded in the desert and had to use your KX3 and a wire to get help, you'd be happy 
to have a match this good.

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