Antenna Tuners, Impedance Matching, and SWR

Two types of impedance match

Antenna tuners seem to be some of the most misunderstood devices in all of amateur radio. In this article, I’ll try to explain what is happening when you use an antenna tuner. I’ll try not to get too much into mathematics, and I’ll also try to squash a few myths.

I really don’t like the name “antenna tuner.” It is a bit of a misnomer, because what most people are referring to is a box connected between their radio and antenna (or internal to their radio) which attempts to match the impedance of the antenna system to something close to the transceiver’s antenna port impedance. This is an impedance match, or impedance transformer. In a standard ham radio tuner, the circuits are essentially the same as those illustrated to the right. Either a Pi or Tee network is used, with the inductors and capacitors being variable via knobs and switches in a manual tuner, or different inductor and capacitor component values being switched in and out of the circuit via relays in the case of an automatic tuner.

Think about it–how can you tune an antenna, changing its electrical properties, by pressing a “TUNE” button on your radio? You can’t. With the exception of remote antenna feed point tuners, antenna tuners do not tune your antenna. They do not physically change your antenna system at all.

Antenna system impedance is composed of a resistive quantity, and a reactive quantity. The reactive quantity can be capacitive or inductive. If you’ve seen impedance written as 50+j17Ω, or 120-j45Ω, that’s what these are. Complex impedances in Cartesian (or rectangular) notation. The first example being 50 ohms resistive, with 17 ohms of inductive reactance (positive sign). The second example being 120 ohms resistive, with 45 ohms of capacitive reactance (negative sign).

No Load

Complex test equipment often isn’t required to troubleshoot antenna impedance issues. Reactance causes phase shifts in voltage and current, resulting in some of the power delivered by your transceiver to be reflected, causing standing waves in the antenna feed line. The extreme example to the right shows 100% reflection due to no antenna connected to the transmitter. The ratio of the maximum amplitude of these standing waves to the minimum amplitude can be measured using a simple SWR meter. This indicates the level of impedance mismatch between the transceiver and the load.

A common misconception is that a high SWR due to a large impedance mismatch causes the power which is reflected back to its source to be absorbed by the transmitter output stage, overheating the output device (RF transistor finals, for example) and eventually burning them up. This is not the mechanism for failure during high SWR operation. When power is reflected and arrives back at the source, most of it is re-reflected back towards the load. This back and forth continues until the energy is dissipated in the load or via the feeder loss. You will often measure a higher output power on a power meter if the VSWR is high in your antenna system because some of the re-reflected power is added to the incident power and the total is displayed on the power meter.

Despite the huge focus placed upon it, and the never-ending quest for 1:1 VSWR, there is little real power loss associated with a moderate VSWR, and no real need for attaining the alleged gold standard of a 1:1 standing wave ratio from a power loss standpoint. In fact, a flat 1:1 VSWR over a wide frequency range can indicate a problem with your antenna system. I often run 800W into a 2:1 or 3:1 VSWR with no problems. Robust coaxial cable and antenna impedance transformers are required for this kind of operation. Check your coax and balun/unun specs.

In a system where there are impedance mismatches, the power loss and reflection routing can be visualized like this:

Damage due to high SWR?

As mentioned previously, contrary to popular belief, failure from high VSWR is not due to the final output transistor (for example) absorbing reflected power.

Driving reactive loads is tough on electronics. High VSWR due to impedance mismatches shouldn’t be ignored. Impedance mismatches can cause failure of electronics, especially the output stages of RF amplifiers. This is due to the excessive reactance in the mismatched antenna system de-tuning the output stage and causing excessive current flow, or oscillation, or high voltages appearing at the output stage, pushing devices beyond their safe operating envelope.

Most modern transceivers will automatically reduce their output power as the VSWR exceeds 2:1 for their own protection, not because of reflected power, but because of the excessive reactance pushing the finals outside of their operating areas.

Tuner Location

Consider the diagram below. Point A is the transceiver antenna port. It is 50 ohms. Point B is the antenna tuner’s “to transceiver” port, which is also 50 ohms. The cable between Point A and Point B is also 50 ohms, and likely a short jumper. All good so far.

We know the antenna port at Point D is presenting an impedance mismatch, so what is happening between Points C and D?
The cable between Point C and Point D is your main coaxial cable run to your antenna.

Impedance matching is achieved in the antenna tuner by presenting a complex conjugate impedance match at Point C. Essentially, the tuner is canceling out the reactive component of the complex impedance presented to it by the mismatched antenna system by presenting it with a reactive component of equal value, but opposite sign.

For example, to match a 50+j17Ω load to 50 ohms resistive, the antenna tuner would present a complex impedance of 50-j17Ω to the load (at Point C), canceling out the inductive reactance with capacitive reactance.
Note: The complex conjugate match is only practical with lossless transmission lines. In reality you’ll never see a transmission line with zero loss. This is more theory than reality.

If the transceiver antenna port and the coaxial cable are both 50 ohms characteristic impedance, what happens if the antenna is not? It means that the coaxial cable is seen as part of the load, and the impedance measured will vary along the length of the coaxial cable feed line between Point C and Point D in the above diagram. The coaxial cable is acting as an impedance transformer (more on that later). The value of the impedance match needed will also vary depending on how long the coaxial cable between Point C and Point D is, or where in the coaxial cable the tuner is placed. See this post for more information on that. Also, the measured SWR will decrease the longer the coaxial cable is, due to normal losses within the cable.

Tuner Location

So, you’re using a tuner to make your transceiver see close to a 50 ohm impedance. It is happy. All is well? Maybe not.

Considering the coaxial cable losses, and the fact that even when using a tuner between the radio and the coaxial cable antenna feeder, the SWR in the feeder will still be high, undue stress can be caused to the coaxial cable due to SWR-induced high voltage and current nodes within the cable. This effectively derates the coaxial cable power handling from a transmitter output power perspective.

How can you avoid this? Use two tuners to decouple the mismatch from the long antenna feed line?

In the above diagram, the coaxial cable between Point C and Point D is your main run up to the antenna. The whole point of using two tuners is to shift the point of mismatch close to the antenna, instead of close to your radio. This way, the whole coaxial cable run up to your antenna is (practically speaking) at 50 ohms. The coaxial jumper between Point E and Point F can be kept as short as possible, keeping losses to a minimum.

Wait a minute – you really need two tuners?

Absolutely not. This was just a step to illustrate where the inefficiencies lie.

Consider the first diagram once again:

For the best efficiency, the long coaxial cable run should be from Point A to Point B, keeping the influence of the antenna impedance mismatch from affecting the coaxial cable feeder. This means the best place for an antenna tuner from an efficiency and low loss standpoint, is right at the antenna. Not at the transceiver.

Wait a minute – who wants to run out and adjust their tuner if it’s at the antenna feed point??

Nobody does. You can have convenience, or efficiency. Not both.

remote antenna tuner may inject some convenience into the equation, and work well for lower powers, but if you’re using 1500W, the amount of volt-amp reactive power the remote tuner will have to tune out may necessitate a huge device!

Theoretically though, reactance consumes no power.

A perfect inductor stores energy in a magnetic field,
0.5*L*(I^2)
A perfect capacitor stores energy in an electrostatic field,
0.5*C*(V^2)

However, resistive losses are inevitable in the system, via inductor DC resistance, and capacitor equivalent series resistance, so power is consumed via that route.

See W8JI’s website for some practical examples.

Resonant? Non-Resonant?

It is often said…

There is no substitute for a correctly tuned, resonant antenna for the frequency you want to use.

Why? Simply because if your antenna is resonant, its impedance is purely real (j0), and its voltage and current are in phase. It is completely resistive and there are no imaginary (reactive) components to the impedance. It is the resistive part of the impedance of the antenna which is important for efficiency. The reactive part stresses the system, negatively impacts the efficiency, and does no real work.

It must be said that a resonant antenna does not mean that it will have the “holy grail” of 1:1 SWR. Often the resonant point and the lowest SWR point will be different. Also, an antenna may have several different frequencies where it is resonant.

It is often impractical and inconvenient to have a collection of single band antennas. I use an Off-Center-Fed Dipole as my main antenna. It presents a good VSWR to my transceiver on the 40, 20, 10, and 6 meter bands. For other bands, I use a tuner.

However, it is also wrong to assume that a non-resonant antenna is somehow lesser than a resonant antenna.

Coaxial cable impedance transformer

A transmission line itself can be an impedance transformer for mismatched loads, as the reactance changes along the length of the cable. For example, an RF open circuit can be made to look like a short circuit by adding a quarter wave long piece of transmission line, and vice versa. This only works well for a specific frequency, since the quarter wavelength changes with frequency. This is also the principle behind open and short circuit tuning stubs.

Therefore, if your antenna tuner is located where most are (in the radio room), the impedance which the antenna tuner sees is the impedance of your antenna, but it sees this impedance after it has been transformed by your coaxial cable. It is for this reason that the antenna tuner located in the radio room is tuning the antenna system, including the transmission line, and not just the antenna.

I don’t want to get into transmission line theory in this article, since that would get very intense, very quickly, but if you’re curious as to how your coaxial cable transmission line transforms impedance, you can download a utility which simulates transmission lines made from real coaxial cable types, TLDetails here:

Be sure and check AC6LA’s website for the most current version of TLDetails, and other great utilities: https://ac6la.com/

A basic practical example

Using the magnificent utility Smith, by Fritz Dellsperger, we can see that if our antenna at Point C in the diagram (DP1 in the datapoint list) is presenting an impedance of approximately 74+j51Ω. However, once that impedance has been transformed through 25 feet of RG-8 (Point B) with a dielectric constant of 2.3, or 66% velocity of propagation, the impedance presented to the tuner (at Point A) is now 113+j28.5Ω (TP2 in the datapoint list). This is the impedance the antenna tuner will present a conjugate match to, in order to efficiently match the antenna system.

A full match example

In this example the components in the blue dashed area are within the antenna tuner. Looking at the datapoints and moving back from the antenna (75.05+j51.36Ω), the impedance is:

  1. Transformed through 25 feet of RG-8 coaxial cable to 111.295+j32.191Ω.
  2. Transformed through the antenna side capacitor (adjusted to 139.3pF) in the tuner to 111.295-49.398Ω.
  3. Transformed via the tuner inductor (set to 874.6nH) to 50.117+j64.536Ω.
  4. Finally transformed to 50.117Ω resistive by the transceiver side capacitor (adjusted to 176.2pF) in the tuner.

Looking at this impedance transformation on a Smith chart, plotting VSWR circles, we can see how the VSWR presented to the transceiver is reduced. The image is less blurry when enlarged (click it).

The datapoints on this Smith chart match the datapoints in the above example, so feel free to refer to both. DP1 is the original antenna impedance. Adding the coaxial cable caused the impedance to be transformed, and so plotting clockwise in a perfect circle around the smith chart (over more than 360 degrees) we arrive at TP2. The antenna side capacitor in the tuner rotates the impedance to TP3, the tuner inductor rotates the impedance to TP4, and finally the transceiver side capacitor in the tuner rotates the impedance to the center of the Smith chart, which is 50 ohms.

What on earth caused this outburst?

I first got the idea to put this article together after hearing lots of people say this lots of times…
(This was years ago, but I’m lazy I’m busy, and it’s taken a while to get motivated!)

If you use an antenna tuner, you just burn up all your power in the tuner. Nothing gets to the antenna, but at least your radio is happy!

-Lots of people

That statement is not exactly true. Sure, a properly adjusted tuner will give your radio a nice comfortable impedance to dump all of its power into, keeping it happy, but the poor efficiency of your antenna system still remains.

In Summary (and some other notes)

When you put all of this information together, it is easy to see how some myths and misconceptions have propagated over the years. Pun intended.

  • Antenna Tuners do not physically tune antennas.
  • Antenna Tuners are an impedance match circuit.
  • Antenna Tuners match the impedance of your antenna system to the impedance of your transceiver.
  • Antenna Tuners, the components in them, and your antenna system are all composed of reactive elements.
  • Since reactance changes with frequency, a match is only perfect at one frequency.
  • Changing frequency even slightly may require the match to be adjusted. This depends on the Q.
  • If adjusted for an optimum impedance match, almost all of the power is transferred through the tuner. Power is not lost in the tuner, except for a small amount due to the efficiency of the circuit and associated components.
  • Additional power is lost in the antenna system due to increased VSWR, but this is not usually significant. However, since the power is re-reflected over and over, it is subject to the coaxial cable losses over and over.
  • When using a tuner, the impedance of the actual antenna system doesn’t change.
  • Think about “non-natural” antennas such as 5/8λ verticals. These are not even close to 50 ohms, and will contain a matching circuit in the base of the antenna to bring it to 50 ohms. More or less, the same thing as an antenna base tuner does.
  • A low VSWR does not guarantee your antenna is working well.
  • A low VSWR does not necessarily indicate the antenna’s resonant point.
  • Yes a 2:1 VSWR reflects 11% of your power, but don’t lose sight of the fact that it’s re-reflected. It is not simply “lost” power. A common misconception is that this reflected power is gone.
  • A high VSWR derates the power handling capacity of your coaxial cable, since using an antenna tuner (on the radio side of your coaxial cable) does not remove the effects of a badly tuned antenna from your coaxial cable feeder.
  • Long coaxial cables can mask the effects of a badly tuned antenna.
  • M. Walter Maxwell’s papers in the “Reflections” series concentrate on the complex conjugate impedance match method. This method is great in theory, but does not find any practical use in the real world.

Other Questions

Do you need a tuner when using a tube amplifier?

This is an interesting question. Tube amplifiers carry a matching network as part of their output tuning. If your antenna system VSWR is 3:1 or less, you probably don’t need to shell out a ton of money for a high power-capable antenna tuner to follow your tube amplifier. The adjustable range of the tube amplifier output match should be able to handle this with no problem. Of course, consult your manual or manufacturer for more information on the specifics of your amplifier output match capabilities, and be mindful of the fact that the impedance mismatch and higher VSWR still remains on your coaxial cable, which may be driven outside of its specifications with a higher VSWR at a higher power.

Further Reading

I have tried to avoid delving into the mathematics regarding matching, loss, and VSWR, but if you’re interested in such things, I highly recommend downloading this PDF of a presentation by Steve Stearns, K6OIK.

(in fact, I recommend checking out all of Steve’s archived articles here: http://www.fars.k6ya.org/docs/k6oik)

How is your transmitted power actually affected by VSWR? Another good article here.

How to effectively use your antenna tuner? Read on:

A practical estimation of losses in T-network tuners:

Impedance Matching and Smith Charts (covers some transmission line theory):

Supplemental Information

Real losses due to VSWR

A fly in the ointment?

Some awkward, but unavoidable issues with this whole process…

  • A transmitter output impedance is not a fixed value. This magical 50 ohms impedance varies depending on frequency, different output power levels, and can be affected by the load.
  • RF systems are rarely designed using solely complex conjugate matching. There are different types of match – for example, are you trying to match for maximum power transfer, or maximum efficiency?
  • Matching for maximum power transfer doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll get the maximum efficiency, and vice versa.

Food for thought…

Visualising Wave Behaviour

The following is a video featuring Dr. J.N. Shive of Bell Labs demonstrating wave behaviour on what is now called the “Shive Wave Machine”. I highly recommend watching this.

Jim, W6LG illustrates losses through an antenna tuner in the following video.

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AD5GG

AD5GG works in the real world as an RF design engineer. Occasionally, he posts articles on this very site. Sometimes they're even worth reading. Please feel free to comment on posts using the comment system at the end of each post, and use the discussion forum.

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Richard
Richard
5 years ago

Excellent article enjoyed reading it and explains it all well done. G0SWB.

Tony
Tony
4 years ago

Great article! The information is clear and the reasoning solid; it clarified a couple of things I was unsure of.
The Bell Labs video was also interesting, but there is a puzzling bit at 5:00. The electrical short is depicted as reflecting in phase … but in order for the short to be 0, don’t the instantaneous incident and reflected waves have to be equal and opposite in value so that their sum is 0?

Luitjens
3 years ago

Your website looks great; the discussion of different matching concepts is very informative.
  
At http://www.rfclb.space/#TLine an MS Excel workbook can be downloaded to calculate feedline losses and compare different impedance matching cases in terms of implied losses at system level. The tool adds quantitively to your website’s qualitative discussion. A screenshot of the tool is also downloadable.
 
Best.
 
P.S. You might like to correct a typo on your website; the energy stored in a capacitor is 0.5*C*(U^2), i.e., voltage squared – not current squared (I^2).

Luitjens
Reply to  AD5GG
3 years ago

Please, feel free to incorporate the tool into your website as appropriately. (Note: After the workbook (downloaded from http://www.rfclb.space/#TLine) has been loaded into Excel for the first time, it will expire after 15 days. The tool development is continuing; at this stage, we want to encourage users to download and use the latest version.)
 
We are interested in receiving feedback and ideas from users. Notably, this includes any problem report. Our goal is a mature, stable, and easy-to-use learning tool on a topic that is often perceived as difficult. We anticipate users are among ham radio enthusiasts (with affinity to details), RF practitioners and students engaging in feedline engineering.

Cheers,
Luitjens

Howie
Howie
3 years ago

Please tell me why auto tuners often Lose their Low SWR lock after tuning? Is that a variation in voltage/ current on the antenna?
Thanks ai6j

dave Butler
dave Butler
4 months ago

In the illustration, “A full match example”, it’s obvious to me how you are cancelling out the reactive component of the impedance, but how are you able to lower the ‘resistive’ component?

Jim
Jim
3 months ago

Thanks so much for these explanations, this has clarified a lot of points for me! May I ask a couple of questions: In the standard set-up where the tuning unit is close to (or within) the transmitter, does putting a choke just after the antenna change anything in terms of the material you presented? If yes what and if no why not? I’m still not clear what happens if you place the tuner right at the base of the antenna, including whether this will improve the RF radiation of the antenna. In theory, won’t it present the adequate amount of inductance/capacitance and result in the antenna resonating the correct frequency (i.e. the antenna will be electrically at, or closer to, the right length for the required frequency)? Consider for example a 17 feet vertical. At 0m height and on perfect ground, mmana-gal calculates that at 7mhz such an antenna would have an impedance of R=6.052 and X=-480.5. Accounting for the 5:1 transformation requirement to 250 ohms, this results in an SWR of 193:1 at the antenna base. Assuming your tuner can tune this and that you have a choke placed at the base of the antenna, will the antenna now… Read more »

Jim
Jim
Reply to  AD5GG
3 months ago

Thanks very much for your response! All clear regarding the placement of the tuner now.

Regarding the second part (antenna resonance), the Palomar article says that with a tuner (let’s say it’s placed at the base of the antenna), “…The non-resonant antenna radiates just as well as a resonant antenna….”. Isn’t that the opposite of what you are saying?

Jimmy
Jimmy
2 months ago

The problem I have with the article is right here. Resonant? Non-Resonant?It is often said… There is no substitute for a correctly tuned, resonant antenna for the frequency you want to use. Why? Simply because if your antenna is resonant, its impedance is purely real (j0), and its voltage and current are in phase. It is completely resistive and there are no imaginary (reactive) components to the impedance. It is the resistive part of the impedance of the antenna which is important for efficiency. The reactive part stresses the system, negatively impacts the efficiency, and does no real work. It must be said that a resonant antenna does not mean that it will have the “holy grail” of 1:1 SWR. Often the resonant point and the lowest SWR point will be different. Also, an antenna may have several different frequencies where it is resonant. It is often impractical and inconvenient to have a collection of single band antennas. I use an Off-Center-Fed Dipole as my main antenna. It presents a good VSWR to my transceiver on the 40, 20, 10, and 6 meter bands. For other bands, I use a tuner. Why do I have a problem with this? Well,… Read more »

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