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Re: SAA2N problem

 

Yes, that makes sense. The diode I used is a bi-directional type with a clamping voltage of 5.5V. Static charge build-up is limited to 5.5V which should be harmless. In my case I'm developing UHF RFID antennas (860-930 MHz). That involves lots of touching the antenna, adding or removing copper tape for frequency tuning and impedance matching. The risk of ESD is high, I blew up 2 units and a customer of mine also 1. For me this is the only serious flaw of the SAA2 analyzer series. Next models will get ESD protection according to the designer. By the way, I did not add a bleeder resistor, might do that to make it even more fool proof.
Reinier

Op 4-2-2021 om 22:56 schreef Ken Sejkora:

Greetings all,

Interesting discussion. When I Googled TVS (Transient Voltage Suppression) diode, it appears there are two varieties, unidirectional and bidirectional. I would assume a ¡®bidirectional¡¯ TVS diode effectively does not have a polarity and would dissipate static charge in either direction. It make perfect sense that wind/dust/snow/etc. blowing across an antenna could induce a static charge across the ¡®capacitor¡¯ represented by a coax cable, so the ¡°polarity¡± of the center-conductor versus the coax shield could change depending on the specific conditions. If a unidirectional TVS diode was connected ¡°backwards¡± across the coax connector as referenced to the coax itself, wouldn¡¯t it represent an ineffective drain of the static charge, and potentially result in damaging the NanoVNA? If TVS diode polarity is important, I would think a bidirectional TVS diode would be the preferred device, followed by a high-value resistor, to bleed off the static charge.

Is my logic flawed? Please enlighten me. Thanks.

Ken, WB?OCV


From: Reinier Gerritsen
Sent: Thursday, February 4, 2021 03:18 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [nanovna-users] SAA2N problem


It's kind of expensive (because SMA connectors aren't free), but one
could probably make a little protection board with a SMA jack one end
and SMA plug on the other, with the TVS diode on the single
microstripline trace in between.? Sort of a dual "connector saver" and
"VNA saver".? The parasitics of the board would "calibrate out" for
the most part.? If you had a steady hand, you might be able to build
one out of just the two connectors, if you get the kind with the posts
- solder the posts together and somehow put the diode in between. I've
done this for making a T or for oddball loads, but it's not something
you'd be proud of.
Soldering the diodes directly on the pcb is easy and you can never
forget them...
See pictures (follow the trace from connector to series capacitor to TVS
diode to resistive pad (3 resistors). The other port has the TVS diode
directly at the input (protects the capacitor too)


Re: SAA2N problem

 

Greetings all,

Interesting discussion. When I Googled TVS (Transient Voltage Suppression) diode, it appears there are two varieties, unidirectional and bidirectional. I would assume a ¡®bidirectional¡¯ TVS diode effectively does not have a polarity and would dissipate static charge in either direction. It make perfect sense that wind/dust/snow/etc. blowing across an antenna could induce a static charge across the ¡®capacitor¡¯ represented by a coax cable, so the ¡°polarity¡± of the center-conductor versus the coax shield could change depending on the specific conditions. If a unidirectional TVS diode was connected ¡°backwards¡± across the coax connector as referenced to the coax itself, wouldn¡¯t it represent an ineffective drain of the static charge, and potentially result in damaging the NanoVNA? If TVS diode polarity is important, I would think a bidirectional TVS diode would be the preferred device, followed by a high-value resistor, to bleed off the static charge.

Is my logic flawed? Please enlighten me. Thanks.

Ken, WB?OCV


From: Reinier Gerritsen
Sent: Thursday, February 4, 2021 03:18 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [nanovna-users] SAA2N problem


It's kind of expensive (because SMA connectors aren't free), but one
could probably make a little protection board with a SMA jack one end
and SMA plug on the other, with the TVS diode on the single
microstripline trace in between.? Sort of a dual "connector saver" and
"VNA saver".? The parasitics of the board would "calibrate out" for
the most part.? If you had a steady hand, you might be able to build
one out of just the two connectors, if you get the kind with the posts
- solder the posts together and somehow put the diode in between. I've
done this for making a T or for oddball loads, but it's not something
you'd be proud of.
Soldering the diodes directly on the pcb is easy and you can never
forget them...
See pictures (follow the trace from connector to series capacitor to TVS
diode to resistive pad (3 resistors). The other port has the TVS diode
directly at the input (protects the capacitor too)


Re: SAA2N problem

 

Hi Dave
The charge only accumulates if it is connected to an antenna that is not a DC short.? ?i.e.? long wire, gama matched Yagi, 1/4 wave vertical etc.
Not a problem with a folded Dipole, loop, or the antenna has most balun designs.
We use to connect an NE-2 neon lamp across the coax connector to a long wire antenna.? ? ? ?Takes about 80 volts to light up an NE-2.? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?Brisk breeze when the humidity was low and that neon light would flash every few seconds.? ??
This is why most preamps have a 10K resistor across their inputs to bleed off that change.
OK, in the shack, but for outside antennas I would not connect my VNA's to an antenna that is not a DC short.
Kent WA5VJB? ?Antenna Editor CQ Magazine.

On Thursday, February 4, 2021, 02:56:03 PM CST, David Eckhardt <davearea51a@...> wrote:

A coaxial cable is a long cylindrical capacitor.? Being by design low loss,
it can accumulate and store a charge for quite some time.? When connecting
any longer piece of coaxial cable or other low-loss transmission line, I
always make it a habit before connecting it to anything expensive or valued
by pressing my finger across the end to discharge any accumulated charge.
Sometimes, there is nothing, but the first time you get 'bit', you will
become a believer.? Transmission charge is highly likely to accumulate
during a thunder storm, wind-blown dust orsand, and even snow fall.

Dave - W?LEV

On Thu, Feb 4, 2021 at 1:27 PM schweppe <schweppe@...> wrote:

When looking at the front end of the nanovna you see a 10?F capacitor in
series with the MXD8641¨CSP4T Switch. This switch can resist 100V in
electrostatic discharge sensitivity testing (Machine Model). This test
is done with a loaded 200pF capacitor and a 0.5 ?H inductor in series.

A typical koaxcable (RG213 od RG58) with 100pF/m and 20m length will
have 20nF of capacitance. If this koax is loaded to 200V by
electrostatic, it will damage the MXD8641. Also if you measure an
outdoor antenna and there is electrostatic in the air, you may damage
your measuring equipment also.

It may be a good thing to protect your nanovna with ESD-diodes when
measuring long koaxcables and/or outdoor antennas.

73, DK5DN

Am 04.02.2021 um 10:30 schrieb Stephen Laurence:
Does this mean that a long length of coax can store/return dangerous (to
the vna) voltages, for example like a Tesla coil, or was the coax connected
to something at the other end?

Should we all be installing esd diodes to the port 1 input? Port 2
already has a 14db attenuator.? Is there a limit to the length we can
measure?

Steve L









--
*Dave - W?LEV*
*Just Let Darwin Work*


Re: SAA2N problem

 

A coaxial cable is a long cylindrical capacitor. Being by design low loss,
it can accumulate and store a charge for quite some time. When connecting
any longer piece of coaxial cable or other low-loss transmission line, I
always make it a habit before connecting it to anything expensive or valued
by pressing my finger across the end to discharge any accumulated charge.
Sometimes, there is nothing, but the first time you get 'bit', you will
become a believer. Transmission charge is highly likely to accumulate
during a thunder storm, wind-blown dust orsand, and even snow fall.

Dave - W?LEV

On Thu, Feb 4, 2021 at 1:27 PM schweppe <schweppe@...> wrote:

When looking at the front end of the nanovna you see a 10?F capacitor in
series with the MXD8641¨CSP4T Switch. This switch can resist 100V in
electrostatic discharge sensitivity testing (Machine Model). This test
is done with a loaded 200pF capacitor and a 0.5 ?H inductor in series.

A typical koaxcable (RG213 od RG58) with 100pF/m and 20m length will
have 20nF of capacitance. If this koax is loaded to 200V by
electrostatic, it will damage the MXD8641. Also if you measure an
outdoor antenna and there is electrostatic in the air, you may damage
your measuring equipment also.

It may be a good thing to protect your nanovna with ESD-diodes when
measuring long koaxcables and/or outdoor antennas.

73, DK5DN

Am 04.02.2021 um 10:30 schrieb Stephen Laurence:
Does this mean that a long length of coax can store/return dangerous (to
the vna) voltages, for example like a Tesla coil, or was the coax connected
to something at the other end?

Should we all be installing esd diodes to the port 1 input? Port 2
already has a 14db attenuator. Is there a limit to the length we can
measure?

Steve L









--
*Dave - W?LEV*
*Just Let Darwin Work*


Re: SAA2N problem

 

I was measuring what turned out to be about 325 foot run of coax. About 200 feet of lmr400 and 125 feet of rg213. Think I will have to find some diodes to solder on the pcb. I don't think I have any surface mount stuff handy. I have mostly larger components on hand :-)
Thanks again!


Re: SAA2N problem

 

It's kind of expensive (because SMA connectors aren't free), but one could probably make a little protection board with a SMA jack one end and SMA plug on the other, with the TVS diode on the single microstripline trace in between.? Sort of a dual "connector saver" and "VNA saver".? The parasitics of the board would "calibrate out" for the most part.? If you had a steady hand, you might be able to build one out of just the two connectors, if you get the kind with the posts - solder the posts together and somehow put the diode in between. I've done this for making a T or for oddball loads, but it's not something you'd be proud of.
Soldering the diodes directly on the pcb is easy and you can never forget them...
See pictures (follow the trace from connector to series capacitor to TVS diode to resistive pad (3 resistors). The other port has the TVS diode directly at the input (protects the capacitor too)


Re: SAA2N problem

 

On 2/4/21 12:00 PM, Thomas Kerns wrote:
Thanks for the help. I don't remember exactly what I was doing at the moment it quit, but I had been measuring a long run of coax, and I had also measured the swr of an outdoor antenna (a 160 meter dipole). That is a lot of wire in the air, with the potential to pick up static, I suppose. I wonder the best way to protect my vna in the future.
I see someone mentioned a drain resistor. Would this be something I would do only when testing? ie make a coax pigtail with a drain resistor across from the shield to the center? would that affect measurements?
It's a good practice in general to "permanently" have a leakage path to ground.? A 100k or 1 meg resistor in a Coax T is one way. If you get a big transient, it will probably fail, so that makes an ohmmeter a useful diagnostic tool <grin>

Some people use a RF choke that has high Z at the operating frequency, but lower DC resistance to bleed the charge faster.

?Standard 0.405" coax (RG-8, RG-213) is about 40 pF/meter, so a 100 ft/30meter run is 1200pF.


Re: SAA2N problem

 

On 2/4/21 11:54 AM, Reinier Gerritsen wrote:
I had 3 broken units a few months ago (the first version of the SAA). Replaced the switches and they were back to life. On one unit I installed esd protection diodes. But since I have my V2plus4, I don't use the old analyzers anymore. I still have to modify all the other analyzers. TVS diode part number: ESD101B102ELE6327XTMA1, a 5.5V TVS bi-directional diode from Infineon, 0.1 pF capacitance. Diodes are cheap. Switches are also cheap at Aliexpress. Replacing the switch is not for the faint hearted. It is a tiny package with a ground pad under the device. Hot air soldering is your only option. A good stereo microscope helps.


It's kind of expensive (because SMA connectors aren't free), but one could probably make a little protection board with a SMA jack one end and SMA plug on the other, with the TVS diode on the single microstripline trace in between.? Sort of a dual "connector saver" and "VNA saver".? The parasitics of the board would "calibrate out" for the most part.? If you had a steady hand, you might be able to build one out of just the two connectors, if you get the kind with the posts - solder the posts together and somehow put the diode in between. I've done this for making a T or for oddball loads, but it's not something you'd be proud of.


Re: SAA2N problem

 

Thanks for the help. I don't remember exactly what I was doing at the moment it quit, but I had been measuring a long run of coax, and I had also measured the swr of an outdoor antenna (a 160 meter dipole). That is a lot of wire in the air, with the potential to pick up static, I suppose. I wonder the best way to protect my vna in the future.
I see someone mentioned a drain resistor. Would this be something I would do only when testing? ie make a coax pigtail with a drain resistor across from the shield to the center? would that affect measurements?


Re: SAA2N problem

 

I had 3 broken units a few months ago (the first version of the SAA). Replaced the switches and they were back to life. On one unit I installed esd protection diodes. But since I have my V2plus4, I don't use the old analyzers anymore. I still have to modify all the other analyzers. TVS diode part number: ESD101B102ELE6327XTMA1, a 5.5V TVS bi-directional diode from Infineon, 0.1 pF capacitance. Diodes are cheap. Switches are also cheap at Aliexpress. Replacing the switch is not for the faint hearted. It is a tiny package with a ground pad under the device. Hot air soldering is your only option. A good stereo microscope helps.

Reinier

Op 4-2-2021 om 14:26 schreef schweppe:

When looking at the front end of the nanovna you see a 10?F capacitor in series with the MXD8641¨CSP4T Switch. This switch can resist 100V in electrostatic discharge sensitivity testing (Machine Model). This test is done with a loaded 200pF capacitor and a 0.5 ?H inductor in series.

A typical koaxcable (RG213 od RG58) with 100pF/m and 20m length will have 20nF of capacitance. If this koax is loaded to 200V by electrostatic, it will damage the MXD8641. Also if you measure an outdoor antenna and there is electrostatic in the air, you may damage your measuring equipment also.

It may be a good thing to protect your nanovna with ESD-diodes when measuring long koaxcables and/or outdoor antennas.

73, DK5DN

Am 04.02.2021 um 10:30 schrieb Stephen Laurence:
Does this mean that a long length of coax can store/return dangerous (to the vna) voltages, for example like a Tesla coil, or was the coax connected to something at the other end?

Should we all be installing esd diodes to the port 1 input? Port 2 already has a 14db attenuator.? Is there a limit to the length we can measure?

Steve L


Re: SAA2N problem

 

On Thu, Feb 4, 2021 at 05:26 AM, schweppe wrote:


When looking at the front end of the nanovna you see a 10?F capacitor in
series with the MXD8641¨CSP4T Switch. This switch can resist 100V in
electrostatic discharge sensitivity testing (Machine Model). This test
is done with a loaded 200pF capacitor and a 0.5 ?H inductor in series.

A typical koaxcable (RG213 od RG58) with 100pF/m and 20m length will
have 20nF of capacitance. If this koax is loaded to 200V by
electrostatic, it will damage the MXD8641. Also if you measure an
outdoor antenna and there is electrostatic in the air, you may damage
your measuring equipment also.

It may be a good thing to protect your nanovna with ESD-diodes when
measuring long koaxcables and/or outdoor antennas.

73, DK5DN

Am 04.02.2021 um 10:30 schrieb Stephen Laurence:
Does this mean that a long length of coax can store/return dangerous (to the
vna) voltages, for example like a Tesla coil, or was the coax connected to
something at the other end?

Should we all be installing esd diodes to the port 1 input? Port 2 already
has a 14db attenuator. Is there a limit to the length we can measure?

Steve L





You could install a static drain resistor of several hundred K Ohms across the antenna terminals to keep static from building up. This is commonly done on shipboard wire antennas.


Re: Differences of H4 and SAA2N #buying #features

 

That is the kind of confirmation I was looking for, thanks Ismo! Between that and the fact that R&L is out of stock on the H4 right now, makes me feel good about getting the SAA2N instead.
Again, Thanks, Ismo!

On Wed, Feb 3, 2021 at 08:10 AM, Ismo V??n?nen OH2FTG wrote:


From what I understand SAA2N has better dynamic range than the 1.5GHz nanoVNA
and thus is better for duplexer and cavity filter tuning.


Re: backyard antenna ranges

 

Jim,
Nice idea. I had been thinking of this myself. I am working on a discone antenna and given it's wide-band and omnidirectional response thought that it would serve well as a receiving antenna for measuring antenna pattern and gain. I'll be sure to let the group know how it works out.

Mark Walter


Re: SAA2N problem

 

When looking at the front end of the nanovna you see a 10?F capacitor in series with the MXD8641¨CSP4T Switch. This switch can resist 100V in electrostatic discharge sensitivity testing (Machine Model). This test is done with a loaded 200pF capacitor and a 0.5 ?H inductor in series.

A typical koaxcable (RG213 od RG58) with 100pF/m and 20m length will have 20nF of capacitance. If this koax is loaded to 200V by electrostatic, it will damage the MXD8641. Also if you measure an outdoor antenna and there is electrostatic in the air, you may damage your measuring equipment also.

It may be a good thing to protect your nanovna with ESD-diodes when measuring long koaxcables and/or outdoor antennas.

73, DK5DN

Am 04.02.2021 um 10:30 schrieb Stephen Laurence:

Does this mean that a long length of coax can store/return dangerous (to the vna) voltages, for example like a Tesla coil, or was the coax connected to something at the other end?

Should we all be installing esd diodes to the port 1 input? Port 2 already has a 14db attenuator. Is there a limit to the length we can measure?

Steve L





Re: How do I load DMR-CLEAR_MEMORY_DFU.dfu

 

On Wed, Feb 3, 2021 at 09:23 PM, John AE5X wrote:


All better now - I was expecting it to indicate that it was in DFU mode. No
indication of it, but it was. Thanks again,

--
John AE5X

Yes, manually putting it into DFU mode doesn't give you any indications except:
- on the H and previous devices, the screen is white
- on the H4, the screen stays dark

If you search through my posts, there is a mod that places a jumper from the centre pin of the jog sw to the boot0 input. This lets you hold down the jog while turning the unit on - same as the H4. makes life easier.

...Larry


Re: SAA2N problem

 

Does this mean that a long length of coax can store/return dangerous (to the vna) voltages, for example like a Tesla coil, or was the coax connected to something at the other end?

Should we all be installing esd diodes to the port 1 input? Port 2 already has a 14db attenuator. Is there a limit to the length we can measure?

Steve L


Re: nanovna-saver installation on Ubuntu 18.04 #nanovna-saver

 

Sorry if my last message was lacking a little in context. The directions I was following were in the document mentioned earlier in this thread, nvna-s-pve-rev-d.pdf

¡ª Greg


Re: nanovna-saver installation on Ubuntu 18.04 #nanovna-saver

 

I've been trying to follow the directions given above to install nanovna-saver on my Linux Mint 20 system. It's a pretty standard installation; I haven't (knowingly) done anything unusual.
I've encountered issues:
python3.7 is no longer available in the standard repos; it's now python3.8 I followed the directions substituting 3.8 for 3.7
All seems to go well until Item 7, "7. Install the latest versions of pip, setuptools and wheel". In that section

(nvna-s) greg@greg-Mint1:~/.venv/nvna-s$ curl | python

produces:

% Total % Received % Xferd Average Speed Time Time Time Current
Dload Upload Total Spent Left Speed
100 1884k 100 1884k 0 0 8376k 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 8376k
WARNING: pip is configured with locations that require TLS/SSL, however the ssl module in Python is not available.
WARNING: Retrying (Retry(total=4, connect=None, read=None, redirect=None, status=None)) after connection broken by 'SSLError("Can't connect to HTTPS URL because the SSL module is not available.")': /simple/pip/
... [Repeated a number of times] ...
Could not fetch URL There was a problem confirming the ssl certificate: HTTPSConnectionPool(host='pypi.org', port=443): Max retries exceeded with url: /simple/pip/ (Caused by SSLError("Can't connect to HTTPS URL because the SSL module is not available.")) - skipping
ERROR: Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement pip
ERROR: No matching distribution found for pip

I went back and installed python3-openssl, but continue to get the same error.

I'm a C programmer, but I confess I'm pretty ignorant about python, so I need some help!


Re: How do I load DMR-CLEAR_MEMORY_DFU.dfu

 

All better now - I was expecting it to indicate that it was in DFU mode. No indication of it, but it was. Thanks again,

--
John AE5X


Re: How do I load DMR-CLEAR_MEMORY_DFU.dfu

 

Nope, but tnx anyway. Gives me an excuse to buy the 4" version.

--
John AE5X