W5lz, you said
"That SWR meter is very easy to fool. It's positioning in the feed line will determine what the resulting SWR reads"
That is untrue,
You cannot fool a vswr meter, the meter will read the vswr at the point of insertion in the line,
You also said
"If the antenna's input impedance is 50 ohms, and the feed line is 50 ohms, and you measure SWR a 1/4 from the antenna, the SWR will read high. No changes at all except move that meter to a 1/2 wave from the antenna and it'll read very nicely"
That is untrue,
when the antenna input impedance is 50ohms resistive & the feedline is 50ohms vswr will read 1:1 anywhere along the line, unless you have CMC on the coax braid,
even when the load is mismatched to the line lets say 50ohm coax & 25ohm resistive antenna,
vswr will read the same 1/4wave & 1/2wave along the line unless you have VERY lossy coax or you have CMC on the braid,
your claim that vswr when using 50ohm coax feeding a 50ohm antenna will read high 1/4wave from the antenna & low 1/2wave from the antenna is W5lz karaoki physics at its finest,
you said
" Sorry, you are mistaken, The reading of an SWR meter can certainly change because of it's placement in the feed line. Try it,"
Yes it can but only when you have CMC on the braid,
you said
"I basically described common characteristics of various electrical length of feed line"
That is untrue,
various electrical lengths of feedline only cause impedance to swing around every 1/4wave along the line & only when the load is mismatched to the line, they do not change vswr readings unless you have CMC on the braid,
When CMC is high it DOES effect vswr along the line and needs fixing,
You are not fooling the meter, the meter CANNOT be fooled, it is reading the vswr at the point you insert it into the line.
try reading "swr meters make you stupid" again & the link in my sig that TheDB posted