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Re: That pesky 50 to 75 ohm conversion.
On Wed, 14 Jul 2021 at 20:02, WB2UAQ <pschuch@...> wrote:
This is a long thread so this might have been mentioned already. I bet I It can be, and that's the most sensible thing to do. Dave |
Re: That pesky 50 to 75 ohm conversion.
ward harriman
You can absolutely measure at one impedance and display at another. Most comprehensive Smith chart programs allow the user to ¡®change the center of the chart¡¯ to any impedance.
You can just import an impedance file and then set the center to (say) 75 ohms and be done. |
Re: Regarding calibration of a nano-vna
#calibration
ward harriman
I am of the practice of ALWAYS doing a calibration. This comes from many scars of debugging ¡®unexpected¡¯ results which, ultimately, turned out to be calibration problems.
Calibration just doesn¡¯t take that long. I consider it insurance against my own forgetfulness. Ward |
Re: Capturing and saving measurements
ward harriman
NanoVNA is intended as a gateway between measurement and analysis/integration endeavors.
If nanoVNA saver is sufficient for your purposes I suppose you should stay with it. I wrote nanoVNA connect because all I needed from nanoVNA- saver was the ability to initiate measurements and write touchstone files. NanoVNA Connect simply cuts out the middleman while providing a streamlined path for calibration and measurement. W |
Re: Capturing and saving measurements
ward harriman
It wasn¡¯t a hard choice. Should Ii have you download and install the software before you have an idea what it does.... or should I show you what it can do and then, if you¡¯re interested, have you download it?
I chose the former. SimSmith is a circuit simulation and evaluation tool. Think Spice without transient analysis. There are,dozens of videos by W0QE and me (AE6TY) on YouTube. The longer version of the video to which I pointed Gives you a slightly larger view of SimSmiths generic capabilities. Sorry for any inefficiencies. Ward |
Re: Regarding calibration of a nano-vna
#calibration
In starting the cal process, it is assumed you have previously set the
desired frequency range. Dave - W?LEV On Thu, Jul 15, 2021 at 11:37 AM Richard Clemens <rich.clemens@...> wrote: On Thu, Jul 15, 2021 at 09:27 AM, Jim Lux wrote:-- *Dave - W?LEV* *Just Let Darwin Work* |
Re: Regarding calibration of a nano-vna
#calibration
On Thu, Jul 15, 2021 at 09:27 AM, Jim Lux wrote:
Very helpful -- however when I do a calibration with nanovna-saver's tool it does not ask for a frequency range when starting the process - confusion...
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Re: Capturing and saving measurements
And they have a bridge! :-)
On Thu, Jul 15, 2021 at 10:55 AM Dragan Milivojevic <d.milivojevic@...> wrote: SimSmith is a simulation program with a completely different purpose. |
Re: Capturing and saving measurements
SimSmith is a simulation program with a completely different purpose.
On Thu, 15 Jul 2021 at 14:46, Richard Clemens <rich.clemens@...> wrote: How does this differ from "nanovna-saver" and is it better or just |
Re: Regarding calibration of a nano-vna
#calibration
On 7/15/21 5:54 AM, Richard Clemens wrote:
Given my limited work with a NanoVNA I ask:Reasons to recalibrate (as opposed to use a saved cal set): 1) A different test setup, where the "reference plane" for the measurements is different.? For instance, if you have test port cables with different length, and you do the cal at the end of the cables. 2) If the frequency span of the measurements is different than the frequency span of the calibration.? The NanoVNA does some interpolation, but if you did a cal from 0-50 MHz and now you're measuring a DUT from 200-300 MHz, the measurement might be iffy. Likewise if you did a cal from 0-900 MHz, and the measurement is from 20-30 MHz. 3) You can't remember what you did for a cal before 4) The temperature or something else has changed significantly. I don't know how temperature sensitive the NanoVNA is, but things like the bridges and detectors will change somewhat with temperature.? The oscillator frequency also changes, although I would expect that to be a 10s of ppm sort of thing, so unless you're measuring crystals or 2kHz wide filters at 30 MHz, you probably wouldn't see it. Think of the NanoVNA as being somewhat like a RF Ohmmeter.? When you turn on the ohmmeter you check to see that it reads infinity with the leads apart, and zero with the leads shorted.? Same sort of thing.? Check to see that it reads appropriately with open and load, and if it looks ok, it probably is.? (If you store it with the load on CH0, then when you turn it on, you'll see the good match, and then when you disconnect the load to connect the DUT, you'll see the reflection match, so that's a easy way to check. |
Regarding calibration of a nano-vna
#calibration
Given my limited work with a NanoVNA I ask:
It appears the calibration routine (so far I have only needed for one port) is done without regard to any parameters being set. Once it is done and saved you can reload it later and use it again. Questions: When would be a case that requires a new calibration vs just reloading one that has been saved? Is it better to do a new calibration each time you fire up the nano rather than used a saved one? What makes a calibration worth saving? ie. how should they be labeled? TNX |
Re: Capturing and saving measurements
On Wed, Jul 14, 2021 at 07:17 PM, Anne Ranch wrote:
How about putting horse before cart and give link to the software beforeI would assume it can be found at the same place you got the version you are using now (if you are already using SimSmith). Try here: Scroll down to download. |
Re: Nano VNA Prt I Basics: Part II Under the Hood de k3eui
#video
On 15/07/2021 06:49, David J Taylor via groups.io wrote:
Many thanks for that! Having fun getting it on my iPad for ChromeCasting toFixed - file name was confusing! David -- SatSignal Software - Quality software for you Web: Email: david-taylor@... Twitter: @gm8arv |
Re: Nano VNA Prt I Basics: Part II Under the Hood de k3eui
#video
On 14/07/2021 19:39, Barry K3EUI wrote:
This is the most recent video on my presentation:Barry, Many thanks for that! Having fun getting it on my iPad for ChromeCasting to the TV. I see Part 2 there, but not Part 1. Am I missing something? 73, David GM8ARV -- SatSignal Software - Quality software for you Web: Email: david-taylor@... Twitter: @gm8arv |
Re: Nano VNA Prt I Basics: Part II Under the Hood de k3eui
#video
This is really great. Thank you
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Martin N6QLH On Wed, Jul 14, 2021, 6:31 PM Charles E. Miller <wb6jhq@...> wrote:
For some reason I¡¯m having trouble downloading your updated files. |
Re: Nano VNA Prt I Basics: Part II Under the Hood de k3eui
#video
The link that Barry posted is not complete. Try this one
-- *Don - W3DRM* |
Re: Nano VNA Prt I Basics: Part II Under the Hood de k3eui
#video
When I click on the link it goes to outlook live.
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Charles Miller On Jul 14, 2021, at 12:04 PM, Barry K3EUI <k3euibarry@...> wrote:
?This is the most recent video on my presentation: Nano VNA Part I The Basics (not much math) Nano VNA Part II The Under the Hood Approach (Advanced topics) I'll also include the latest PDF of the slides - enough for a few hours of discussion The video listed below was recorded a few days ago by the Leicester Radio Society (UK) TU G8PGO David Carter. I'm learning as I am playing, so here are the latest two videos The Part I is just the "basics" without any of the math. That video was also recorded. If you spot any errors on either video please let me know. This is rather technical stuff. The ending on both presentations was a bit abrupt since I ran out of time. !AtLJBaL57qLbg5sz6VcyxJdPeQaCrw?e=RkNpYx have fun watching de k3eui Barry k3euibarry@... ![]()
Title Page Nano VNA Part II.jpg
Nano VNA PDF part I and II July 14.pdf
Nano VNA PDF part I and II July 14.pdf
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Re: Nano VNA Prt I Basics: Part II Under the Hood de k3eui
#video
For some reason I¡¯m having trouble downloading your updated files.
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
Charles Miller On Jul 14, 2021, at 12:04 PM, Barry K3EUI <k3euibarry@...> wrote:
?This is the most recent video on my presentation: Nano VNA Part I The Basics (not much math) Nano VNA Part II The Under the Hood Approach (Advanced topics) I'll also include the latest PDF of the slides - enough for a few hours of discussion The video listed below was recorded a few days ago by the Leicester Radio Society (UK) TU G8PGO David Carter. I'm learning as I am playing, so here are the latest two videos The Part I is just the "basics" without any of the math. That video was also recorded. If you spot any errors on either video please let me know. This is rather technical stuff. The ending on both presentations was a bit abrupt since I ran out of time. !AtLJBaL57qLbg5sz6VcyxJdPeQaCrw?e=RkNpYx have fun watching de k3eui Barry k3euibarry@... ![]()
Title Page Nano VNA Part II.jpg
Nano VNA PDF part I and II July 14.pdf
Nano VNA PDF part I and II July 14.pdf
|
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