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Re: Accuracy of calculated values - Nano VNA and Saver
Hi Rune,
Understood. I really like Saver and very much appreciate what you have achieved so far, especially in such a short space of time, and I'm very grateful for your effort and dedication. A lot of Owen's frustration is due to problems with other VNA's and antenna analysers that have some serious issues with calculated values that never seem to get fixed, and the negative response he has had from the manufacturers when these have been flagged up, hence his reluctance to engage directly. I agree that amateur conventions often differ from those used in the professional world, and that perhaps some of Owen's comments are merely a reflection (no pun intended) of that conflict. However is heart is in the right place when trying to point out these issues, even if perhaps his methodology is not to your liking. The AIM VNA shows both parallel and series values, so maybe it would be useful to include those in addition to conductance & admittance and then it's not necessary to resort to external calculators and spreadsheets ? Finally - would it be possible to add some user definable SWR marker lines to the Smith and SWR plots ? Regards, Martin - G8JNJ |
Re: Accuracy of calculated values - Nano VNA and Saver
Dr. David Kirkby from Kirkby Microwave Ltd
On Fri, 4 Oct 2019 at 13:55, Rune Broberg <mihtjel@...> wrote:
I have not read the article by Owen, but I would agree on this single point about return loss. But I never commented to you, as it is a subject of much debate. If there was a very clear majorty for one convention or the other, I would stay you should go with it, but there's not a clear majority, so use whatever you want. If I was to use your software, which I might well do, but m interest is in portable use, without external software, I would probably recompile and change the sign. My HP LCR meter allows one to display this R+jX think in multiple formats. I could give them to you if you wanted, but again, you know what space you have. While I am sending you a message, there's something else I thought of that could be of use to many people, but you might not want to get involved in, so I did not bother. Your software could be useful to those of us with the very popular HP 8753 series VNA. It would be good if you could support reading from them too. The Python code to open a GPIB code and read from it is about 5 lines long. Much of the other commands you use to set up a NonVNA would have an equivalent in 8753. -- Rune / 5Q5R -- Dr David Kirkby Ph.D C.Eng MIET Kirkby Microwave Ltd Registered office: Stokes Hall Lodge, Burnham Rd, Althorne, CHELMSFORD, Essex, CM3 6DT, United Kingdom. Registered in England and Wales as company number 08914892 Tel 01621-680100 / +44 1621-680100 |
Re: How many hardware versions?
Thanks, Herb and Rune!
Wiki now has a "Hardware Versions" link: /g/nanovna-users/wiki ====================== Perhaps the nanoVNA-F could be added? Thanks, David -- SatSignal Software - Quality software for you Web: Email: david-taylor@... Twitter: @gm8arv |
Re: Accuracy of calculated values - Nano VNA and Saver
Dr. David Kirkby from Kirkby Microwave Ltd
On Fri, 4 Oct 2019 at 13:38, Martin via Groups.Io <martin_ehrenfried=
[email protected]> wrote: Hi All,*As soon as I looked at Rune's software, I thought "Return loss should not be negative",* but I did not comment. There was a note in an IEEE article, where the editor stated he has seen negative values, made the argument for why a return loss should be positive, and expected authors to correct this. But I have come to the conclusion that this is like arguing religion. You are unlikely to convince a believer of religion X that he/she is wrong, and religion Y is right, so you might as well give up! -- Dr David Kirkby Ph.D C.Eng MIET Kirkby Microwave Ltd Registered office: Stokes Hall Lodge, Burnham Rd, Althorne, CHELMSFORD, Essex, CM3 6DT, United Kingdom. Registered in England and Wales as company number 08914892 Tel 01621-680100 / +44 1621-680100 |
Re: Nano VNA - Useful frequency range
Hi Martin,
there are firmware versions that go to 1500MHz. The frequency limit does nothing to limit the number of data points, and very, very little to limit other features within the NanoVNA. It's just a few bytes of extra code :-) So I don't think there are any merits to making more frequency limited firmware versions. -- Rune / 5Q5R On Fri, 4 Oct 2019 at 14:56, Martin via Groups.Io <martin_ehrenfried= [email protected]> wrote: Hi All, |
Nano VNA - Useful frequency range
Hi All,
I've been reading the comment about frequency range vs sample size and other issues and I'd like to suggest / discuss some thoughts. Although it's nice to have the capability to measure up to 900MHz, I suspect that because of the type of use the Nano is likely to be put to, I don't think most users need to be able to measure above 500MHz (actually 470MHz). This is because it marks the start of the UHF terrestrial TV broadcast band, which continues up to 800MHz + and the next frequency bands of interest are likely to be 1090MHz and above particularly 1.3GHz and 2.4GHz all of which are all above the upper frequency limit of the Nano. The highest frequency amateur band below 500MHz is 433MHz (which is also an ISM band) so having a bit of headroom above this is still useful when building antennas or testing filters. If the upper limit was set to 500MHz would this be adequate for most users, and allow more data points and facilitate other stuff that is currently not possible when up to 900MHz is available ? Or does it not actually make that much difference if the upper limit is 500 or 900 MHz ? Regards, Martin - G8JNJ |
Re: Accuracy of calculated values - Nano VNA and Saver
Hi Martin,
I too read Owen's post. I'm not particularly fond of his way of implying that I would be "resistant to correction"; and calling what I do "very hammy". If it is one's intention to post like that, I would consider it normal courtesy to inform the author of the software in question. "Return loss" when shown as a negative value should probably be termed "reflection coefficient". But using the term "return loss" and a negative value has become the norm within at least the hobbyist community. I consider the NanoVNA a hobby device. I might make a "stickler mode" for those who can't look past it ;-) I don't see that he refers to anything I have calculated as being *wrong* - just that he doesn't like the particular things that I have chosen to calculate (equivalent L/C for parallel X, instead of using conductance/admittance). I have put in the readings that have been requested by users. If there are any miscalculations in my software, I do what I can to correct them. I have not recently been made aware of any problems, and at no point by Owen. I hope that any of you would immediately contact me, should you find errors in NanoVNA-Saver! :-) -- Rune / 5Q5R On Fri, 4 Oct 2019 at 14:38, Martin via Groups.Io <martin_ehrenfried= [email protected]> wrote: Hi All, |
Re: Cal-Kit Standards' Definitions
Dr. David Kirkby from Kirkby Microwave Ltd
On Sun, 29 Sep 2019 at 17:40, Jeff Anderson <jca1955@...> wrote:
On Sun, Sep 29, 2019 at 03:43 AM, Dr. David Kirkby from Kirkby MicrowaveAlthough more difficult to implement in the firmware, and a PITA for users, it would not be surprising if even better performance could be obtained by * Setting C0 to 0 * Reading C1 from the datasheet of the cal kit * Adjusting the offset delay from the data in the cal kit, to some longer delay, which would depend on C0. That way only two parameters are entered into the cal kit definitions (a delay and C0). The problem would be every user would need to compute a value for the delay, which would be different for the value in the cal kit. But as an academic exercise - you have convinced me that for the professional calibration kits, used up to 1500 MHz, an offset delay and C0 are fine. Best regards,Dave, G8WRB Dr David Kirkby Ph.D C.Eng MIET Kirkby Microwave Ltd Registered office: Stokes Hall Lodge, Burnham Rd, Althorne, CHELMSFORD, Essex, CM3 6DT, United Kingdom. Registered in England and Wales as company number 08914892 Tel 01621-680100 / +44 1621-680100 |
New mode R / L / C display
Hi All,
I've been using my Nano quite extensively in the workshop, and I find it very handy for quickly checking the value of surface mount components, particularly capacitors and inductors. It would be really nice if it was possible to just display the RLC values (and Q ?) in big text (no graph required) for a defined frequency (or frequencies) so it could be used in place of a separate RLC meter, many of which can only measure values at low frequencies <1MHz. What do others think - would this be useful ? Regards, Martin - G8JNJ |
Accuracy of calculated values - Nano VNA and Saver
Hi All,
Owen Duffy has recently posted a note about the Nano VNA on his blog. He makes a few points about the accuracy of calculated values with both the Nano VNA and Saver in particular. If we first deal with the issue of Return Loss, which is probably the most problematic par, and has certainly caught me out on several occasions. Just about every instrument I can remember using, has RL shown as a negative curve, even if the units themselves are positive. This is handy if for example you are tuning a filter, as you can see the insertion gain on the uppermost trace and the RL loss on the lower one without them overlapping. It also matches the convention of SWR plots and when measuring the RL of cables it matches the convention of more attenuation being negative. However Owen makes the point that negative loss is actually gain (double negative) and vice versa, and the existing conventions do indeed lead to confusion and mistakes being made. Maybe return loss should really be called return gain, and then everyone would be happy (well maybe - but this is not a serious suggestion). However if we put this to one side, there is still the issue of how the values are being calculated, and if they are in fact correct. If not then I think this should be investigated in more detail and fixed, as there would seem to be an opportunity to do this before it propagates further. Regards, Martin - G8JNJ |
Re: How many hardware versions?
The block diagram is missing the measurement of the reference signal?
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Op 4-10-2019 om 12:31 schreef hwalker: Pluto, |
Re: info update
In your web space I see many files, I need only DMR-CLEAR_MEMORY_DFU.dfu and an executable program, is it correct?
Should I find the program.exe? ..Again: Reasons you might want to upgrade: 1. TDR capability in firmware. -> Can you measure the length of the coaxial cables? 2. Operation up to 1500 MHz (at reduced performance). -> No thanks (ugly dynamic... I imagine)! 3. DFU mode in firmware. -> So at the moment I can't delete the memory with the DMR-CLEAR_MEMORY_DFU.dfu file? 4. Change from 2 trace to 4 trace firmware (or vice versa). -> Better 2 tracks if it slows down with 4...?! With 2 tracks is the "aa" or "ch"? 5. Change to 800 MHz max operation for better device stability -> Interesting. At the moment I have an abnormal peak at 300Mhz on channel S21, maybe it could solve this problem (maybe it's a self oscillation). Thanks.. |
Re: NanoVNA V2
Hello group,
some remarks: On Sun, Sep 29, 2019 at 10:21 AM, Gabriel Tenma White wrote: take a look at Raspberry Pi 3.5" lcds with 480x320 resolution, or bare with ILI9486/ILI9488 controller (a lot of them can be found on chinese shops) * frequency range will go to at least 3.5GHz; PLL limit is 4.4GHz.please consider the MAX2871 which is cheaper than ADF4350 and offers much more than ADI chips at this price (prices compared at Farnell or Digikey - I know chinese clones are far cheaper...) -the footprint and pinout is the same. vy73 Slawek/SP9BSL |
Re: info update
Rob,
Please understand that "DMR-CLEAR_MEMORY_DFU.dfu" will wipe your device and it will not work until you re-load whatever firmware you are upgrading to. It is used to give you a clean slate prior to installing your new firmware. Some users have not been able to upgrade successfully it they do not load "DMR-CLEAR_MEMORY_DFU.dfu" first. All the tools and instructions you need to perform a firmware upgrade are in the links I previously provided. My best advice is that if you are happy with how the nanoVNA is performing to hold off upgrading the firmware until you see a feature or improvement released that you want. Reasons you might want to upgrade: 1. TDR capability in firmware. 2. Operation up to 1500 MHz (at reduced performance). 3. DFU mode in firmware. 4. Change from 2 trace to 4 trace firmware (or vice versa). 5. Change to 800 MHz max operation for better device stability Herb |
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