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Re: O S L on antenna side of a balun / choke with stud terminals?
'm not sure I completely agree :) Fortunately (or unfortunately) the transmission line acts as a impedance transformer. Given the length of the transmission line, impedance "shown" on to the TX might be the same as antenna's impedance, or quite different (depends on transmission line length and it's impedance).
Like wise, what TX "presents" to the t-line is not what will be presented to antenna (the same principle where t-line transforms impedance). I do NOT known if this transformation done by the t-line is reciprocal: let's take a simple example. Take antenna tuner out of picture, so you have TX(50), t-line(100), and antenna (25). By carefully selecting t-line's length, you can transform antenna's 25 to match TX's 50. I think (!?!) that at the same time, on the antenna side, using the same t-line magic, TX's 50 will be now "presented" to antenna as 25! If this is true (is it?), you can expend to any length of the t-line by adding antenna tuner - whatever t-line presents to TX side (let's call that Zx) will be matched to 50, and like wise, TX side will appear to t-line as Zx, and t-line will transform that to 25 on the antenna side. If all this holds water, if TX sees SWR as 1:1, that means that SWR on the antenna side is the same! Two (hand picked) examples of reciprocity: 1) lambda/4 t-line transforms short (0 ohm) to open (>>0). Wise versa is the case as well: >>0 on one side transforms to 0 on the other 2) lambda /12 t-line does magic Z1*Z2=sqrt(Zt) (multiplied impedances from each side are square root of t-line's impedance If, in generic case (any t-line length/impedance) the following holds true Z1=k*Z2 and Z2=1/k*Z1 ("k" is impedance transformation "factor" that t-line does), it appears that good SWR on one side is good SWR on the other as well, right? Now, you make an interesting point, if all this magic is happening by "bouncing" waves back and forth, cost of doing it with real t-line with losses might be significant - wave bouncing back and forth will lose some of it's energy in the t-line, and seeing SWR meter showing 1:1 on the either side will NOT indicate that such losses are present. Antenna tuner will make t-line/antenna appear "friendly" to TX, but will not deliver all the power to ether |
Re: O S L on antenna side of a balun / choke with stud terminals?
To directly answer you final question, SWR is the same throughout the length of a transmission line.
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Losses in the transmission line will make the SWR higher toward the antenna end, but usually not by much. I say this because the outgoing power will be slightly weaker at the antenna end than at its source from the antenna tuner, the reflection back from the antenna feedpoint will be slightly stronger at the antenna end. Jerry, KE7ER On Wed, Aug 19, 2020 at 07:54 AM, Miro, N9LR wrote:
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Re: Performance of my nanovna V2 clone - return loss of port 2 seems much too high ?
Peter Ide-Kostic
Hello,
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Thank you for your anwer Ok, please find below the same test but done without any cables on port 1 and only a through cable to connect to port 1 and port 2. I have also used 400 points to get a clean accurate trace with as little noise as reasonably possible. => At 1.5 Ghz; the return loss on port 2 is still significantly too low (15.5 dB vs 20dB) expected, *so no changes* => At 3 Ghz, the return loss has improved significantly, *it is now 14.7 dB which is a bit better than the 13dB specified officially.* => At 2.33 Ghz, the return loss is 11.7 dB is which is much too low, it should be minimum 13dB according to the specifications [image: image.png] *Conclusion*: my measurements and yours simply confirm that the return loss on port 2 of my nanovna 2 clone is unfortunately not as good as the one of your genuine nanovna V2 model <> . This is the confirmation that I wanted to have (thanks for your help). I am not saying all the nanovana V2 clones systematically under perform on port 2 the return loss, but on the other hand, if I have the issue then other clown owners may have it too (quite common sense really). It will not prevent me from sleeping at night, but at least I know.... Kindly note that the quality of the calibration loads and of the SS405 cables that I used for this test are perfectly OK. Thanks Regards Peter On Mon, Aug 17, 2020 at 8:47 PM <switchabl@...> wrote:
Peter, |
Re: O S L on antenna side of a balun / choke with stud terminals?
I'll assume you have 50 ohm coax from transmitter to antenna tuner.
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From antenna tuner to 25 ohm antenna is 100 ohm coax. The antenna tuner is adjusted so the transmitter sees a 1:1 SWR in the coax between transmitter and tuner. The impedance change from 100 to 25 ohms between the transmission line and the antenna will create a reflection, some of the outgoing power heads back to the antenna tuner. This creates standing waves as the reflection interferes with the outgoing power. The job of the antenna tuner is to reflect all of that power coming back from the antenna, sending it back out to the antenna in phase with the power from the transmitter. So assuming the 100 ohm coax is lossless, none of the power in those reflections is lost. But there will be an SWR of 100/25 = 4:1 in the transmission line from antenna tuner to antenna. Jerry, KE7ER On Wed, Aug 19, 2020 at 07:54 AM, Miro, N9LR wrote:
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Re: O S L on antenna side of a balun / choke with stud terminals?
Might appear to be slightly off topic, but I hope it's not :)
Lets assume we have ideal/lossless "everything" from end to end. Source (TX) is pure 50 Ohm, the same with coax 100 Ohm, antena 25 Ohm. Over simplified, but will get us going. Reflections everywhere (TX to coax, coax to antenna). Now, I put antenna tuner between TX and coax (or coax and antenna), make transition from 50 to whatever impedance coax is now presenting (coax length, transformed 25 ohm from antenna, ...), get SWR 1:1. Does it now mean that SWR is 1:1 at the antenna end as well? Asked differently, if SWR is low at one end, does it mean it's low on the other end as well (again, lossless components used!) |
Re: SWR trace always showing 1:1 as flat line at bottom of screen
Are you sure you had the proper port selected for the SWR trace? S21 not
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S11? *Clyde K. Spencer* On Tue, Feb 18, 2020 at 3:11 AM <nanovnagroup@...> wrote:
Hi, |
Re: We started selling SAA2 with N-type RF connector and 4-inch display
Thank you for opening my eyes to the various ways of calibrating for non-insertable devices. Much of what you generously shared is above my paygrade, so to speak. So, I plan to re-read your post several times in the hope of gleaning more knowledge from your information-dense reply.
Moving forward, I wish the connector discussion will focus on enabling the nanoVna to live up to the "vector" in its moniker because if the phase measurement of a DUT with same-sex connectors (non-insertable device) is rubbishy, then the usefulness will drop to that the "scalar" level. Furthermore, with true 2-port VNAs in the pipeline by both Gabriel & "a member of the V2 team", developing a non-insertable calibration technique should assume greater importance. .....They are not exclusive to APC7The above paragraph startled me enough to make me check at Keysight website. Indeed, as you correctly claimed, the current 85033E 3.5 mm calkit does include options 100/200/300 for matched f-f, m-f and m-m adapters. However, rolling back to just one earlier revision, to the 85033D, these options didn't exist. Instead, APC-7-to-3.5 adapters were included for measuring non-insertable devices. Likewise, the 8753ES VNA was sold together with a N calkit (85032B) that has APC7-to-N (m/f) adapters, explicitly for use with non-insertable devices. My point is, until fairly recently, APC7-based "swap equal adapters" was the dominant technique for sub 6GHz VNA. (digression: subsequently, e-Cal came along and freed us from learning calibration!) :-) If the APC7 equiped nanoVna fails to materialize, my backup plan is coincidentally somewhat similar to your above recommendation - swap between 83059B (f-f) & 83059C (m-f) 3.5mm adapters. I know they aren't phase matched, but judging from their physical lengths, I hope they are close :-) I am interested in non-insertable devices calibration techniques that are suitable for the nanoVna. If you feel the "offline" unknown-THRU cal is doable by dedicated hobbyists, please consider documenting the steps for us to follow. Thanks. Leong, 9W2LC |
Re: Where did OneOfEleven go
She is on "leave" if I remember correctly
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-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Terry VK5TM Sent: 19 August 2020 08h03 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [nanovna-users] Where did OneOfEleven go /g/nanovna-beta-test/topic/76204167 - but you need access permission. -- Terry VK5TM |
Re: O S L on antenna side of a balun / choke with stud terminals?
Seems the half wavelenth of coax thing would be accurate
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only on a very narrow range of frequencies (and harmonics). Calibrating a VNA through the coax can cover as much spectrum as you wish. Jerry, KE7ER On Tue, Aug 18, 2020 at 08:02 PM, k4mla wrote:
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Re: O S L on antenna side of a balun / choke with stud terminals?
You can match/measure the feed point of your antenna by using an _electrical_ half wavelength or multiples thereof, between the tuner/analyzer and the antenna.
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Larry, K4MLA On 8/16/2020 2:39 PM, KENT BRITAIN wrote:
The wire may be non-resonate without your home brew matching network,but with the network it has to be.??? To be an efficient radiator, you haveto resonate.???? Kent WA5VJB |
Re: Phase of very high quality N short
On Wed, 19 Aug 2020 at 00:04, Dana Whitlow <k8yumdoober@...> wrote:
I couldn't figure out who from the morass of comments, Even if the standards are 180 degrees apart in phase, the calibration routines need to know the exact phases at each frequency. +100 degrees and -80 are significantly different from +110 degrees and -70 degrees, yet both differ by exactly 180 degrees. In any case, it is impossible to keep the phases 180 degrees apart at all frequencies. A polynomial is used to express the fringing capacitance of the open and sometimes the inductance of a short too, although the inductance of the short is a significantly smaller effect. --Dr. David Kirkby, Kirkby Microwave Ltd, drkirkby@... Telephone 01621-680100./ +44 1621 680100 Registered in England & Wales, company number 08914892. Registered office: Stokes Hall Lodge, Burnham Rd, Althorne, Chelmsford, Essex, CM3 6DT, United Kingdom |
Re: Source for H4 Padded Storage Case?
On 8/18/20 5:02 PM, Jim Lux wrote:
On 8/18/20 4:10 PM, AA7US wrote:I¡¯ve searched for hours and so far come up empty handed...In addition to the suggestions in my last email... or a portable hard drive case: zillions of cases in every size and configuration you can imagine... You can have it tomorrow in most cases. |
Re: Source for H4 Padded Storage Case?
On 8/18/20 4:10 PM, AA7US wrote:
I¡¯ve searched for hours and so far come up empty handed...In addition to the suggestions in my last email... There are a wide variety of soft sided cases made for portable games (your Nintendo Switch, for instance) with pockets for adapters, games, etc. |
Re: Source for H4 Padded Storage Case?
On 8/18/20 4:10 PM, AA7US wrote:
I¡¯ve searched for hours and so far come up empty handed... Check out Pelican cases, they have some fairly small ones. Another source is Cabela's (or Walmart, perhaps) - a small gun case might work. Both of those will typically have foam inserts that you cut as you need. The Pelican ones are prescored as 1/2" cubes, so you just pluck out the ones to make the right size holes. Those are likely to be hard sided. The softer sided ones - The ones I've used have been for things like CDs or headphones. You might try something like Guitar Center's online store in the accessories. Or an auto supply place like PepBoys, Kragen, AutoZone. They often have cases of various sizes to store stuff in. And finally, places lie U-Line sells all manner of shipping and factory organizing stuff, and some of it is storage containers. (You might find something for the medical industry, but it will be wretchedly expensive) |
Re: Source for H4 Padded Storage Case?
Not soft, and you'd need to provide your own padding.
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But if interested in that retro look, search for "empty cigar box" on ebay. If not considered appropriate for a nanoVNA, could use it for your grid dip meter. I'd probably just steal some tupperware-ish thing out of the kitchen. Jerry, KE7ER On Tue, Aug 18, 2020 at 04:23 PM, AA7US wrote:
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