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Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

F1AMM
 

So Gunk = sqrt (Gunk^2)
So Gunk = M1 * M3 / M2


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

On 8/23/22 1:59 PM, Donald S Brant Jr wrote:
NBS (now NIST) published the dimensions of a reference dipole for such uses: 2 1¦Ë dipoles above a 1.6¦Ë x 2¦Ë ground plane. Built properly it should have gain accurate to a few tenths dB or less at the design frequency.
The EIA published a similar standard gain antenna, shown in 5.2.5 of this document: The paper also has good information on antenna gain testing.
73, Don N2VGU
It's also in the ARRL Antenna book.

But in reality, you can build two identical reference dipoles in almost any configuration (they don't even have to be resonant or matched to 50 0 ohms) and do a three cornered hat to remove the common term.

Let Gunk be the gain of the unknown.
Let Gref1 and Gref2 be the gain of the reference antenna

Make three measurements at the same distance, with each possible pair.

M1 = Gunk * Gref1
M2 = Gref1 * Gref2
M3 = Gunk * Gref2

M1*M3/M2 = (Gunk^2 * Gref1 * Gref2)/(Gref1 * Gref2) = Gunk^2

So Gunk = sqrt (Gunk^2)


Doing it in dB is easier, of course.


This doesn't account for ground bounce, reflections, etc. - That's another technique.


Re: Bug or fubar'd upgrade? #firmware

Cliff
 

Cool! Seems to work fine here on MacOS.

73,
Cliff, AE5ZA

On Aug 23, 2022, at 19:15, Tim Dawson <tadawson@...> wrote:

FYI, the python based tool at appears to pull perfect binary images out of the NanoVNA .dfu files found on Huygen's site (checksums the same as his .bin files).

The best news is that it is tiny, and being Python based, should work on any platform - Mac, Win, *nix - and allows the use of the ST Micro recommended Cube programmer tool

FWIW . . .

- Tim


On 08/23/2022 02:37 AM, Ho-Ro wrote:
On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 08:58 AM, Ho-Ro wrote:

To build the FW ... just type "make" and "make flash",
Default is -H, for -H4 the command is

TARGET=F303 make && make flash



--
Tim Dawson

972-567-9360




Re: Bug or fubar'd upgrade? #firmware

 

FYI, the python based tool at appears to pull perfect binary images out of the NanoVNA .dfu files found on Huygen's site (checksums the same as his .bin files).

The best news is that it is tiny, and being Python based, should work on any platform - Mac, Win, *nix - and allows the use of the ST Micro recommended Cube programmer tool

FWIW . . .

?- Tim

On 08/23/2022 02:37 AM, Ho-Ro wrote:
On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 08:58 AM, Ho-Ro wrote:

To build the FW ... just type "make" and "make flash",
Default is -H, for -H4 the command is

TARGET=F303 make && make flash



--
Tim Dawson

972-567-9360


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

Using the substitution method in measuring emissions from equipment for
regulatory purposes, a dipole and a signal generator is used. There many
reference dipoles out there to be had on the used market. I have several.
They are also easy to make, but be sure to decouple the feedline with a
number of ferrites of appropriate mix.

Page 25 of the First Edition of J. D. Krauss *ANTENNAS* may also be
useful. While it won't get you the closest 0.1 dB, it offers a simple
method without using a reference antenna.

[image: image.png]

I'll also attach the page in case this group does not support in-text
images.

Dave - W ?LEV




On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 8:59 PM Donald S Brant Jr <dsbrantjr@...>
wrote:

NBS (now NIST) published the dimensions of a reference dipole for such
uses: 2 1¦Ë dipoles above a 1.6¦Ë x 2¦Ë ground plane. Built properly it
should have gain accurate to a few tenths dB or less at the design
frequency.
The EIA published a similar standard gain antenna, shown in 5.2.5 of this
document: The paper also
has good information on antenna gain testing.
73, Don N2VGU





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


--
Dave - W?LEV


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

NBS (now NIST) published the dimensions of a reference dipole for such uses: 2 1¦Ë dipoles above a 1.6¦Ë x 2¦Ë ground plane. Built properly it should have gain accurate to a few tenths dB or less at the design frequency.
The EIA published a similar standard gain antenna, shown in 5.2.5 of this document: The paper also has good information on antenna gain testing.
73, Don N2VGU


Re: Bug or fubar'd upgrade? #firmware

Cliff
 

Roger,

Worked great. Now I have to figure out the extra menus, but that's to be expected. Thanks so much for the file. Maybe it could be uploaded to the file section of the group for others to use if they wish?

73,
Cliff, AE5ZA

On Aug 23, 2022, at 13:26, Roger Need via groups.io <sailtamarack@...> wrote:

On Mon, Aug 22, 2022 at 03:04 PM, Cliff wrote:


Thank you for your suggestion Roger, but I don't think you understand what I
am looking for. I'm looking for the .bin version of the firmware 1.2 update
file. I'm on Mac and use the STM Cube Programmer to update my NanoVNA H4. The
NanoVNA-App appears to be a Windows program.
Cliff,

You can covert a dfu file to bin using the DFU File Manager that comes with DfuSe demo but unfortunately that only installs on Windows. I did the conversion for you of DiSlords version 1.2 dfu file that I found at the link below.


I hope the attached bin file works for you. Please post after you have tried it.

Roger







<NanoVNA.H4.v1.2.00.bin>


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

Thank you for your reply. Very interesting.

Fred - N4CLA

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 3:23 PM W0LEV <davearea51a@...> wrote:

QUOTE: " Just out of curiosity, why would you want a 450 ft doublet
resonant at 950 kHz?"

Just to install as much wire in the air as is reasonable. I could string
well over a couple thousand feet, but ....... We live on 40-acres in
Northern Colorado in the foothills of the Rockies. So, why not? It is fed
with parallel conductor XMSN line, a robust (home brew and meticulously
characterized) common mode choke (actually several, depending on frequency)
and an over designed (again, pretty robust) L-Network matching network
(a.k.a., "antenna tuner").

An antenna or set of wires doesn't have to be resonant where one desires to
be a good radiator/receiver of RF energy. I use these wires from
630-Meters (with additional inductance) through 6-Meters. I also have an
NVIS 40-meter dipole and a 6-Meter inverted Vee on the hillside, but seldom
used. Most of the antennas are for radio astronomy and/or ionospheric
profiling (mainly E-Layer).

Dave - W?LEV

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 6:15 PM Fred Moore <n40cla@...> wrote:

Good afternoon Dave.

Just out of curiosity, why would you want a 450 ft doublet resonant at
950
kHz?

Fred - N4CLA

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 2:01 PM W0LEV <davearea51a@...> wrote:

A dipole, by definition, is resonant: +jX = -jX = 0.

A doublet is a dipole, but not resonant where you require.

My 450-foot doublet exhibits its first 1/2-wavelength resonance at
roughly
950 kHz, but does not show resonance in any of the HF ham bands.

Yes, measurements need to be made to reduce / minimize unwanted
reflections. That's the devil in the details.

Dave - W?LEV

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 5:54 PM Roger Need via groups.io
<sailtamarack=
[email protected]> wrote:

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 10:13 AM, W0LEV wrote:


A dipole works fine for the reference antenna. Nominally 2.2_ dB
gain
over
isotropic.
That is the gain of a dipole antenna in free space at resonance.
Over
ground the gain is higher. How much higher depends on height and
ground
characteristics.

Roger





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


--
Dave - W?LEV









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


--
Dave - W?LEV






Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

No, Jim, absolutely no attempt to ever consider measuring the "gain" of my
450-foot doublet!!! At best, I model it using 4NEC2 and even that with a
large crystal of salt.

Measuring the gain (directivity?) of an antenna applies to VHF and above!
HF? Do the modeling. But, then, the NEC code does a miserable job of
handling "ground" (earth).

Dave - W?LEV

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 7:08 PM Jim Lux <jimlux@...> wrote:

On 8/23/22 11:00 AM, W0LEV wrote:
A dipole, by definition, is resonant: +jX = -jX = 0.

A doublet is a dipole, but not resonant where you require.

My 450-foot doublet exhibits its first 1/2-wavelength resonance at
roughly
950 kHz, but does not show resonance in any of the HF ham bands.

Yes, measurements need to be made to reduce / minimize unwanted
reflections. That's the devil in the details.
You're not going to be measuring the gain of a 450 foot antenna with a
NanoVNA.


The OP was for a printed circuit antenna, presumably well above 100 MHz.


The fundamental problem will be the free space loss. Let's assume
isotropes for the moment. Let's further assume that the probe/reference
antenna is 5 wavelengths away.

At 300 MHz, that's 5 meters.

Loss = 32 + 20*log10(0.005) + 20 *log10(300) = 32-46+50 dB = 36 dB loss.

So that's plausibly ok - your S21 readings will still be big enough that
the uncertainty due to SNR won't be too bad.

And you can measure that in a backyard range. You need to move the
probe up and down so that you can quantify the "ground bounce"
contribution.

By the way, the usual guideline for antenna test distance of
2*D^2/lambda isn't really valid for low gain antennas. But if you take D
as 1/2lambda, you wind up with 2*0.5^2 * lambda^2/lambda which is 1.4
lambda.









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


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

QUOTE: " Just out of curiosity, why would you want a 450 ft doublet
resonant at 950 kHz?"

Just to install as much wire in the air as is reasonable. I could string
well over a couple thousand feet, but ....... We live on 40-acres in
Northern Colorado in the foothills of the Rockies. So, why not? It is fed
with parallel conductor XMSN line, a robust (home brew and meticulously
characterized) common mode choke (actually several, depending on frequency)
and an over designed (again, pretty robust) L-Network matching network
(a.k.a., "antenna tuner").

An antenna or set of wires doesn't have to be resonant where one desires to
be a good radiator/receiver of RF energy. I use these wires from
630-Meters (with additional inductance) through 6-Meters. I also have an
NVIS 40-meter dipole and a 6-Meter inverted Vee on the hillside, but seldom
used. Most of the antennas are for radio astronomy and/or ionospheric
profiling (mainly E-Layer).

Dave - W?LEV

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 6:15 PM Fred Moore <n40cla@...> wrote:

Good afternoon Dave.

Just out of curiosity, why would you want a 450 ft doublet resonant at 950
kHz?

Fred - N4CLA

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 2:01 PM W0LEV <davearea51a@...> wrote:

A dipole, by definition, is resonant: +jX = -jX = 0.

A doublet is a dipole, but not resonant where you require.

My 450-foot doublet exhibits its first 1/2-wavelength resonance at
roughly
950 kHz, but does not show resonance in any of the HF ham bands.

Yes, measurements need to be made to reduce / minimize unwanted
reflections. That's the devil in the details.

Dave - W?LEV

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 5:54 PM Roger Need via groups.io <sailtamarack=
[email protected]> wrote:

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 10:13 AM, W0LEV wrote:


A dipole works fine for the reference antenna. Nominally 2.2_ dB
gain
over
isotropic.
That is the gain of a dipole antenna in free space at resonance. Over
ground the gain is higher. How much higher depends on height and
ground
characteristics.

Roger





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


--
Dave - W?LEV









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


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

On 8/23/22 11:00 AM, W0LEV wrote:
A dipole, by definition, is resonant: +jX = -jX = 0.
A doublet is a dipole, but not resonant where you require.
My 450-foot doublet exhibits its first 1/2-wavelength resonance at roughly
950 kHz, but does not show resonance in any of the HF ham bands.
Yes, measurements need to be made to reduce / minimize unwanted
reflections. That's the devil in the details.
You're not going to be measuring the gain of a 450 foot antenna with a NanoVNA.


The OP was for a printed circuit antenna, presumably well above 100 MHz.


The fundamental problem will be the free space loss. Let's assume isotropes for the moment. Let's further assume that the probe/reference antenna is 5 wavelengths away.

At 300 MHz, that's 5 meters.

Loss = 32 + 20*log10(0.005) + 20 *log10(300) = 32-46+50 dB = 36 dB loss.

So that's plausibly ok - your S21 readings will still be big enough that the uncertainty due to SNR won't be too bad.

And you can measure that in a backyard range. You need to move the probe up and down so that you can quantify the "ground bounce" contribution.

By the way, the usual guideline for antenna test distance of 2*D^2/lambda isn't really valid for low gain antennas. But if you take D as 1/2lambda, you wind up with 2*0.5^2 * lambda^2/lambda which is 1.4 lambda.


Re: Bug or fubar'd upgrade? #firmware

Cliff
 

Hey Roger,

Thanks a bunch! I'll give it a go and let you know how it went.

73,
Cliff, AE5ZA

On Aug 23, 2022, at 13:26, Roger Need via groups.io <sailtamarack@...> wrote:

On Mon, Aug 22, 2022 at 03:04 PM, Cliff wrote:


Thank you for your suggestion Roger, but I don't think you understand what I
am looking for. I'm looking for the .bin version of the firmware 1.2 update
file. I'm on Mac and use the STM Cube Programmer to update my NanoVNA H4. The
NanoVNA-App appears to be a Windows program.
Cliff,

You can covert a dfu file to bin using the DFU File Manager that comes with DfuSe demo but unfortunately that only installs on Windows. I did the conversion for you of DiSlords version 1.2 dfu file that I found at the link below.


I hope the attached bin file works for you. Please post after you have tried it.

Roger







<NanoVNA.H4.v1.2.00.bin>


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

he does not want it ... but it is ;-)

fed with a balanced tuner it should work any band from 160 to 10

maybe the ladderline length needs some tuning if you are at a very high or low impedance spot on a higher band but in principle a doublet (or biiiiig loop) is the best multibander you can have ... just needs a good tuner

dg9bfc sigi

ps i am using a 168m loop ... also fed via ladderline

Am 23.08.2022 um 20:15 schrieb Fred Moore:

Good afternoon Dave.

Just out of curiosity, why would you want a 450 ft doublet resonant at 950
kHz?

Fred - N4CLA

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 2:01 PM W0LEV <davearea51a@...> wrote:

A dipole, by definition, is resonant: +jX = -jX = 0.

A doublet is a dipole, but not resonant where you require.

My 450-foot doublet exhibits its first 1/2-wavelength resonance at roughly
950 kHz, but does not show resonance in any of the HF ham bands.

Yes, measurements need to be made to reduce / minimize unwanted
reflections. That's the devil in the details.

Dave - W?LEV

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 5:54 PM Roger Need via groups.io <sailtamarack=
[email protected]> wrote:

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 10:13 AM, W0LEV wrote:

A dipole works fine for the reference antenna. Nominally 2.2_ dB gain
over
isotropic.
That is the gain of a dipole antenna in free space at resonance. Over
ground the gain is higher. How much higher depends on height and ground
characteristics.

Roger





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


--
Dave - W?LEV







Re: Bug or fubar'd upgrade? #firmware

 

On Mon, Aug 22, 2022 at 03:04 PM, Cliff wrote:


Thank you for your suggestion Roger, but I don't think you understand what I
am looking for. I'm looking for the .bin version of the firmware 1.2 update
file. I'm on Mac and use the STM Cube Programmer to update my NanoVNA H4. The
NanoVNA-App appears to be a Windows program.
Cliff,

You can covert a dfu file to bin using the DFU File Manager that comes with DfuSe demo but unfortunately that only installs on Windows. I did the conversion for you of DiSlords version 1.2 dfu file that I found at the link below.


I hope the attached bin file works for you. Please post after you have tried it.

Roger


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

Good afternoon Dave.

Just out of curiosity, why would you want a 450 ft doublet resonant at 950
kHz?

Fred - N4CLA

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 2:01 PM W0LEV <davearea51a@...> wrote:

A dipole, by definition, is resonant: +jX = -jX = 0.

A doublet is a dipole, but not resonant where you require.

My 450-foot doublet exhibits its first 1/2-wavelength resonance at roughly
950 kHz, but does not show resonance in any of the HF ham bands.

Yes, measurements need to be made to reduce / minimize unwanted
reflections. That's the devil in the details.

Dave - W?LEV

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 5:54 PM Roger Need via groups.io <sailtamarack=
[email protected]> wrote:

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 10:13 AM, W0LEV wrote:


A dipole works fine for the reference antenna. Nominally 2.2_ dB gain
over
isotropic.
That is the gain of a dipole antenna in free space at resonance. Over
ground the gain is higher. How much higher depends on height and ground
characteristics.

Roger





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


--
Dave - W?LEV






Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

A dipole, by definition, is resonant: +jX = -jX = 0.

A doublet is a dipole, but not resonant where you require.

My 450-foot doublet exhibits its first 1/2-wavelength resonance at roughly
950 kHz, but does not show resonance in any of the HF ham bands.

Yes, measurements need to be made to reduce / minimize unwanted
reflections. That's the devil in the details.

Dave - W?LEV

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 5:54 PM Roger Need via groups.io <sailtamarack=
[email protected]> wrote:

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 10:13 AM, W0LEV wrote:


A dipole works fine for the reference antenna. Nominally 2.2_ dB gain
over
isotropic.
That is the gain of a dipole antenna in free space at resonance. Over
ground the gain is higher. How much higher depends on height and ground
characteristics.

Roger





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


--
Dave - W?LEV


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 10:13 AM, W0LEV wrote:


A dipole works fine for the reference antenna. Nominally 2.2_ dB gain over
isotropic.
That is the gain of a dipole antenna in free space at resonance. Over ground the gain is higher. How much higher depends on height and ground characteristics.

Roger


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

A dipole works fine for the reference antenna. Nominally 2.2_ dB gain over
isotropic.

Dave - W?LEV

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 2:00 PM KENT BRITAIN <WA5VJB@...> wrote:

Yes, but you need a source antenna and an antenna for the same frequency
with known gain. Kent WA5VJB
On Tuesday, August 23, 2022 at 08:56:38 AM CDT, Diane BONKOUNGOU <
dianebonk2@...> wrote:

Hello,
Is it possible to measure PCB trace antenna Gain with the NanoVNA?
Thanks











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


Re: Bug or fubar'd upgrade? #firmware

 

No desire - Cube is a far better tool, and supported by ST. I see no real advantage to .dfu over .bin, and ST has obsoleted it as well.

On August 23, 2022 1:58:56 AM CDT, Ho-Ro <homuth-rosemann@...> wrote:
On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 06:41 AM, Tim Dawson wrote:


It's about the only component missing on tbe Linux side for coders that only
output .dfu
For FW upgrade on a Linux system you can use "dfu-util" that is available e.g. for Debian:

$ apt show dfu-util
Package: dfu-util
Version: 0.9-1+b1
Priority: optional
Section: electronics
Source: dfu-util (0.9-1)
Maintainer: Uwe Hermann <uwe@...>
...
DFU is intended to download and upload firmware to devices connected over
USB. It ranges from small devices like micro-controller boards up to mobile
phones. With dfu-util you are able to download firmware to your device or
upload firmware from it.

Just do "apt install dfu-util"

The program can flash *.bin as well as *.dfu binaries:

dfu-util -a 0 -D NanoVNA.H.v1.2.00.dfu

To build the FW on your own from the github clone (you need also "apt install gcc-arm-none-eabi") just type "make" and "make flash", this calls:

dfu-util -d 0483:df11 -a 0 -s 0x08000000:leave -D build/ch.bin

HTH, Martin




--
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.


Re: Antenna Gain measurement with NanoVNA

 

Yes, but you need a source antenna and an antenna for the same frequency with known gain.? ?Kent WA5VJB

On Tuesday, August 23, 2022 at 08:56:38 AM CDT, Diane BONKOUNGOU <dianebonk2@...> wrote:

Hello,
Is it possible to measure PCB trace antenna Gain with the NanoVNA?
Thanks