BIG QUOTE
Rs is a given quantity, and is never zero. For a given Rs, the maximum power is transferred when Rl = Rs.
So why take a HUGE QUOTE and cut out the line that already said exactly that?
Signal to noise going in the wrong direction here!
I see:
Maximum power into either the fixed resistor or the power into the sum of both resistors is maximised when the other resistor is 0 (short), not when they are equal (half power -3dB in sum, quarter power -6dB in individual).
Given a voltage source the maximum power dissipation is with the lowest value resistive load. Impedance matching is/was about getting maximum power into a resistor connected to a resistive voltage source.
I see it saying the max power into either the fixed resistor or the sum of both resistors is maximized when the other resistor is 0. Giving slack for the horrible english grammar, I interpret this to mean power is maximized when one resistor is 0. No? Maybe you meant something different?
You want to discuss something technical that requires strict and terse language and the complain when the explanation is strict and terse? The long post was concluded with the simple explanation for when impedance matching is required and works and people juts keep ignoring it.... oh, I see it must be the season of pointless argument.
ejeffrey stated the basis plainly and clearly, to correct the misleading generalisation from Mechatrommer:
in order max power transfer... Zin must be = Zout... ie Z of coax cable + termination is 50 ohm... that is Zout... Zin is at opamp output, series resistor ensure Zin as nearly as 50 ohm throughout BW, see graph page 15 attached below... .
No. The maximum power transfer theorem states that for a given source, maximum power is delivered if the load is matched. It does not apply to selecting the source impedance. Adding a resistor on the source will reduce the power delivered to the load by 6 dB.
The reason for source termination is to, as everyone else said, is for signal integrity not power transfer. It will further damp reflection from imperfect load termination, isolate the output amplifier from load reactance, and present a higher impedance (100 ohm) load to the amplifier.
I requoted that good explanation (in full with context) when yet another incorrect generalisation was posted by Siwastaja.
Mechatrommer then posts up some negative reaction trying to be clever with mansplaining, that was only repeating the conclusion that I had agreed with and already posted, and explicitly repeated in my post. But by removing that (very intentional) sentence it makes it look like you (bson) are correcting something (which never existed as the bolded part above already said that explicitly, plainly, and clearly).
Impedance matching is/was about getting maximum power into a resistor connected to a resistive voltage source.
People are jumping around and arguing about different things, I put up a larger post which clearly separates the two, then user (Mechatrommer) comes in and try to remove that delineation and continue arguing on the confusion. Its stupid, misleading, and only making the information here harder to follow.
There is nothing incorrect in the post I put up, but now we have to mop up a half a dozen posts of nonsense. Seems disruptive and unhelpful.
But since you insist....
Given a voltage source and two resistors in series, one of which is fixed at X ohms and you cannot change its value, you can maximize the power by choosing another resistor = X ohms, too. THAT'S IT!
Performance art?
[... acknowledgement of previous good answer, and expanding on where the confusion is....]
Maximum power into either the fixed resistor or the power into the sum of both resistors is maximised when the other resistor is 0 (short), not when they are equal (half power -3dB in sum, quarter power -6dB in individual).
Given a voltage source the maximum power dissipation is with the lowest value resistive load. Impedance matching is/was about getting maximum power into a resistor connected to a resistive voltage source.
Talking about a source with a fixed output impedance is something completely different to talking about two resistors in parallel.
Maximum power is produced/created from a source terminated signal into a short. That isn't very useful if you are trying to get power into some load, but all these stupid (and incorrect explanations) skip over that and make a nonsense generalisation. A better generalisation is two resistors in series generate the most power when their series resistance is minimised.
Coming back to termination and what ejeffrey put so well, given a fixed load termination the maximum power is
not delivered by matched source impedance. Mechatrommer had incorrectly flipped the clauses around and ejeffrey corrected it. A source with zero impedance delivers the most power to a given load..... but as the op was realising and asking, then why add source impedance?
But we cant even approach answering that because there is so much bickering and noise about the underlying basics, filling up this forum with noise and rubbish.