simulating an RF transmitter

R

roger

Guest
Hello,

I was wondering, how is the an RF transmitter's output simulated ? I
mean, sure electrical simulations can be easily done with any
simulator out there, but how is the output power / range of
transmitter simulated ?
I am assuming that the RF transmitter will have generator to produce a
sinus wave of strong amplitude (probably a resonant network of some
sort) which will be fed to an antenna of quarter wavelength (don't
really know 1/4 lambda, but i been told its for maximum power
transfer). This being said, I still am at a loss at how the RF power
can be evaluated via electrival simulation.

roger
 
"roger" <roger345909@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:a135149c.0405101925.3c65e138@posting.google.com...
Hello,

I was wondering, how is the an RF transmitter's output simulated ? I
mean, sure electrical simulations can be easily done with any
simulator out there, but how is the output power / range of
transmitter simulated ?
I am assuming that the RF transmitter will have generator to produce a
sinus wave of strong amplitude (probably a resonant network of some
sort) which will be fed to an antenna of quarter wavelength (don't
really know 1/4 lambda, but i been told its for maximum power
transfer). This being said, I still am at a loss at how the RF power
can be evaluated via electrival simulation.
Just use a resistive load and calculate the power in it.

Leon
--
Leon Heller, G1HSM
http://www.geocities.com/leon_heller
 
On Tue, 11 May 2004 06:22:29 +0100, "Leon Heller"
<leon_heller@hotmail.com> wrote:

"roger" <roger345909@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:a135149c.0405101925.3c65e138@posting.google.com...
Hello,

I was wondering, how is the an RF transmitter's output simulated ? I
mean, sure electrical simulations can be easily done with any
simulator out there, but how is the output power / range of
transmitter simulated ?
I am assuming that the RF transmitter will have generator to produce a
sinus wave of strong amplitude (probably a resonant network of some
sort) which will be fed to an antenna of quarter wavelength (don't
really know 1/4 lambda, but i been told its for maximum power
transfer). This being said, I still am at a loss at how the RF power
can be evaluated via electrival simulation.

Just use a resistive load and calculate the power in it.
In place of the antenna, of course!
--

"What is now proved was once only imagin'd." - William Blake, 1793.
 
"roger" <roger345909@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:a135149c.0405101925.3c65e138@posting.google.com...
Hello,

I was wondering, how is the an RF transmitter's output simulated ? I
mean, sure electrical simulations can be easily done with any
simulator out there, but how is the output power / range of
transmitter simulated ?
I am assuming that the RF transmitter will have generator to produce a
sinus wave of strong amplitude (probably a resonant network of some
sort) which will be fed to an antenna of quarter wavelength (don't
really know 1/4 lambda, but i been told its for maximum power
transfer). This being said, I still am at a loss at how the RF power
can be evaluated via electrival simulation.

roger
There are ways to simulate transmission lines, antenna performance, etc.
What are you trying to do?
 
Check out "Equivalent Circuit of a Dipole Antenna Using Frequency
Independant Lumped Elements", 1993.

--jw
 

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