G
Guest
| (e-mail address removed) wrote:
|>
|> | Previously you said Martzloff "flubbed the experiment".
|>
|> I remember that. You were telling me about some information he had
|> obtained from some experiment.
|>
|> | Now you agree with Martzloff that branch circuit must be 200m for
|> | transmission line behavior with 1.2 microsecond rise time.
|>
|> That's not a result of an experiment.
|
| "*From this first test*, we can draw the conclusion (predictable, but
| too often not recognized in qualitative discussions of reflections in
| wiring systems) that it is not appropriate to apply classical
| transmission line concepts to wiring systems if ..."
|
| As usual, you don?t know what was written.
What what kind of surge did Martzloff use to carry out that test?
|> I'm not so sure the exact distance
|> is 200m for that exact rise time. But that is a subjective thing.
|
| Quit equivocating. Where is your cite. Like for nanosecond risetimes.
Observation.
|> | You say that doesn't apply because surges are faster. Martzloff uses 1.2
|> | us because that is a standard rise time for surges produced by lightning
|> | as defined in IEEE standards.
|>
|> Martzloff did not say that was a defined standard in the statement you
|> quoted. He just used it as an example to come up with the 200m figure.
|
| He used it because 1.2/50 (voltage) is an IEEE standard. The 8us from
| w_?s engineer is another standard (8/20 current).
The standard for what? The typical surge?
|> | w_' professional engineer source says 8 micoseconds with most of the
|> | spectrum under 100kHz.
|>
|> Even with 1 nanosecond rise time, most of the energy will be present in
|> the spectrum below 100 kHz. That means nothing when the surge is strong
|> enough to have energy above some frequency that is relevant to the whole
|> system involved that can do damage. That frequency might be 100 Mhz for
|> some thing, and 1 GHz for other things.
|
| Still missing ? your source. Nanosecond risetime. 100MHz spectrum.
Observation. Of course this is a concept you cannot understand.
|> | You still have *no sources that support your belief* that risetimes are
|> | far faster.
|>
|> I have experience and observation for that. I need no more.
|
| Lots of people have experience and observation with flying saucers.
|
| The rest of us want a source.
The only flying saucers I have seen are the ones I've tossed.
|>
|> | Previously you said Martzloff "flubbed the experiment".
|>
|> I remember that. You were telling me about some information he had
|> obtained from some experiment.
|>
|> | Now you agree with Martzloff that branch circuit must be 200m for
|> | transmission line behavior with 1.2 microsecond rise time.
|>
|> That's not a result of an experiment.
|
| "*From this first test*, we can draw the conclusion (predictable, but
| too often not recognized in qualitative discussions of reflections in
| wiring systems) that it is not appropriate to apply classical
| transmission line concepts to wiring systems if ..."
|
| As usual, you don?t know what was written.
What what kind of surge did Martzloff use to carry out that test?
|> I'm not so sure the exact distance
|> is 200m for that exact rise time. But that is a subjective thing.
|
| Quit equivocating. Where is your cite. Like for nanosecond risetimes.
Observation.
|> | You say that doesn't apply because surges are faster. Martzloff uses 1.2
|> | us because that is a standard rise time for surges produced by lightning
|> | as defined in IEEE standards.
|>
|> Martzloff did not say that was a defined standard in the statement you
|> quoted. He just used it as an example to come up with the 200m figure.
|
| He used it because 1.2/50 (voltage) is an IEEE standard. The 8us from
| w_?s engineer is another standard (8/20 current).
The standard for what? The typical surge?
|> | w_' professional engineer source says 8 micoseconds with most of the
|> | spectrum under 100kHz.
|>
|> Even with 1 nanosecond rise time, most of the energy will be present in
|> the spectrum below 100 kHz. That means nothing when the surge is strong
|> enough to have energy above some frequency that is relevant to the whole
|> system involved that can do damage. That frequency might be 100 Mhz for
|> some thing, and 1 GHz for other things.
|
| Still missing ? your source. Nanosecond risetime. 100MHz spectrum.
Observation. Of course this is a concept you cannot understand.
|> | You still have *no sources that support your belief* that risetimes are
|> | far faster.
|>
|> I have experience and observation for that. I need no more.
|
| Lots of people have experience and observation with flying saucers.
|
| The rest of us want a source.
The only flying saucers I have seen are the ones I've tossed.