Identify the Balanced Transmission Line Which of the following transmission lines is inherently a balanced line (equal and opposite conductors with respect to ground)?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: TV twin lead

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Balanced versus unbalanced transmission determines how currents return and how a line couples to nearby structures. Balanced lines carry equal and opposite currents on two conductors with minimal common-mode radiation.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • “Balanced” means symmetrical conductors with respect to ground.
  • We compare common RF interconnect types.


Concept / Approach:

TV twin lead is the classic two-wire balanced line: both conductors are equivalent and neither is tied to ground. Coaxial line is unbalanced (outer conductor often at ground potential). Microstrip and single-ended stripline use a single signal conductor over/within a ground reference, also unbalanced.


Step-by-Step Solution:

1) Examine geometry: twin-lead has two symmetric wires → balanced.2) Coax: central conductor plus outer shield → unbalanced.3) Microstrip/stripline (single-ended): one signal trace referenced to ground → unbalanced.


Verification / Alternative check:

Baluns (balanced-to-unbalanced transformers) are used to interface twin-lead to coax, highlighting the difference.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:

Coax and microstrip/stripline are unbalanced by default; waveguide supports TE/TM modes and is not a two-conductor balanced line.


Common Pitfalls:

Assuming “differential stripline” equals “strip line” generically; the default single-ended stripline is unbalanced unless specifically routed differentially as a pair.


Final Answer:

TV twin lead

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