Yes 338
when you see lets say for example adding a 3ft jumper to your coax effects the vswr reading significantly it is effecting all frequencies near to where you are tuning about the same,
elsewhere you may not have as much common mode because the coax braid is a different electrical length at other frequencies & may not be causing much cmc on the braid,
but that's NOT fooling the meter as that well known and often repeated MYTH will tell you,
you are changing the common mode impedance of the braid that is seen in parallel with the load at the antenna end & that is changing the vswr FOR REAL,
You cannot fool the meter, only people are fooled,
if you use a good choke to eliminate most of the current on the braid vswr won't change much when you add or remove a short jumper,
whenever you DO see your vswr change by messing with jumper length that's a very good indicator you have common mode & you should be fixing that issue first.
Not only because it can cause RFI and receive noise on the braid but it also can spoil your radiation pattern,
It may all seem a bit complicated & it is if you go into the equations of it all & your math's algebra aint so good,
I forgot most of that when I left school,
But you don't need any of that math's algebra to understand the basic concepts & how to recognize when you have cmc & what to do to minimize or eliminate those effects,
in the same way that you don't need to understand how oil chemistry, fluid dynamics & hydrodynamic bearings work to know what to do if the low oil light comes on in your truck,
keep reading reflections,
what's in there is the same stuff as Bird & Tellewave & mfj tells you,
People are happy to use their meters & analyzers but make their own shit up about what its telling them
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if anybody mentions fooling the meter you now know they don't know what they are talking about.
If anybody tells you They are tuning their antenna to resonance from the rig end of the coax you now know that's almost certainly not true,
lowest vswr occurs at the self resonant frequency of the antenna.
The resonance you see at the rig end is a combination of antenna reactance been cancelled by reactance in the coax and very well may not be where the antenna is actually resonant
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