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Re: V2 Design
#nanovna-v2
Glen K4KV
Who is our group tech leader who is going to test it and give a report?
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73 Glen K4KV On 3/4/2020 23:13, Gabriel Tenma White wrote:
I've gotten news that it's started selling on taobao and tindie will soon follow; should show up if you search "nanovna v2" on taobao. |
Re: Ceramic filter measurement
aparent1/kb1gmx
David Platt,
First the input has a L-network coil plus input C of the Jfet. So the input impedance is likely under 2000 ohms maybe 75 ohms. The gray areas on the drawing modules are triple tuned band pass circuits, a real pain to dial them in but better than commonly used transformers (only double or single tuned) of the day. You will need a output pad as that likely has gain in excess of 18-40DB to protect the VNA input. Also a attenuator at the input as over driving it will cause errors. Marantz did a lot of neat and odd things over the years. The 10.7 ceramic filters (not the narrower crystal filters) are typically 300 or 1500 ohm load. Ceramic filter do not like DC applied to them ( lifespan issue). The usual way to jig them is two back to back broad band transformers to go from 50 to user defined impedance and the exact same back to 50 ohms. Hooked up on a board the networks can be "calibrated" for loss and band width. The filters are inserted and tested. Generally they are much wider than the desired FM bandwidth so the critical item is center frequency. Allison ---------------- No direct email, it goes to bit bucket due address harvesting in groups.IO |
Re: SO-239 standards for HF Band-pass filter work?
Glen K4KV
Dave,
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Some folks are getting all worked up over the small stuff. Reminds me of what I was taught in the Air Force:? measure with a micrometer, mark with a grease pencil, cut with a chain saw. I remember a trip I took for several weeks to VA to stay with my grandson while his mother jetted off to EU for 10 days.? I brought my handheld 2M, but could not hit the repeaters inside with the rubber duckie.? Found some #22 wire, made a dipole for 2M, thumb tacked it to the wall up as high as I could, made "coax" with the #22 as twisted pair.? Worked like a champ! 73 Glen K4KV On 3/4/2020 12:25, David Eckhardt wrote:
In that respect, after working decades above 50 MHz, 630 and 2200 meters is |
Re: SO-239 standards for HF Band-pass filter work?
In that respect, after working decades above 50 MHz, 630 and 2200 meters is
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a relief. Clip leads are not even seen by the RF energy. Dave - W?LEV On Wed, Mar 4, 2020 at 4:23 PM DougVL <K8RFTradio@...> wrote:
Aha! Great - I had wondered at the time I read it about the power --
*Dave - W?LEV* *Just Let Darwin Work* *Just Think* |
Re: SO-239 standards for HF Band-pass filter work?
Aha! Great - I had wondered at the time I read it about the power capacity of the N type. Since I don't have any, though, I wasn't motivated to research it. Glad to know the truth now - thanks.
I know a lot of older (tube-type) test equipment used twin banana plugs. Maybe the development of o'scopes that reached higher frequencies caused the development of the shielded coaxial connector. And I'm not sure I should even post this, drifted so far off topic. I do think the original question was important, and the info about HF measurements not being so critical of lead lengths for calibration. Doug |
Re: Ceramic filter measurement
On Tue, Mar 3, 2020 at 04:12 PM, David Platt wrote:
This will give you a high S11 return loss, andAs you say, fiddling with something this complex is unwise; it's said they had to invent a stereo sig-gen good enough to get the lowest distortion and highest stereo separation it could achieve over the full audio spectrum. I want to look at the 19, but reserve an 18 for tweaking, one I did more than 30 years ago. At that time anything worth listening to was over 150 miles away, and it needed better adjacent channel selectivity. I narrowed the IF substantially using its built-in scope, which displays bandpass shape and (with a constant scope horizontal gain) was useful to gauge the change. Steep sides and flat top over the IF passband for a wide range of input signals - the only way to gauge flatness of each stage, as they gain-compressed. When I lookSo, you have that schematic? Let me know if not; I have service manuals for both the 18 and 19. A safety "gotcha" here, though... this IF strip has some gain in it due to theAgreed! I'm most concerned about the VNA output amplitude, which almost certainly far exceeds even the strongest off-the-air signal. Pad input and output, then reduce as required. Appreciate your feedback, Dave. -- I_B_Nbridgema |
Re: Calibration connectors
Hi John,
This matter has already been discussed by those skilled in the art of calibration. What's important is that you can use it in short waves, but you said both 2M and 70cm. Therefore, I would recommend that you purchase a N dad calibration kit. I bought it on aliexpress for 18 usd at a reasonable price here: It's cheaper now :D I hope I could help. 73, Gyula HA3HZ |
Calibration connectors
John MacLean MM0CCC
Newbie question. I run 2 x 10cm sma pigtails from my nano, onto an external frame. They connect to a back to back SMA <> N Socket. My reason for this is I will use the nanovna-f outdoors a lot, connecting 10mm dia and up coax, so I'm not keen on direct connection to an SMA, with or without pigtails.
Question is, for calibration, can I just use the 3 x SMA calibration connectors by placing these onto an SMA <> N Plug adapter on the other side of the frame, or will the additional distance inside the adapter affect this? I'd be mainly using this in HF and 2m if this is more critical at higher frequencies, although ideally, I may also need to use on 70cm at times as well. 73 John MM0CCC |
Re: Ceramic filter measurement
I found a copy of a 1998 Murata databook for these sorts of filters. One set of graphs shows the effect of having source/load impedances which diverge from 330 ohms. Higher impedances seem to create the sort of effects we can see in my most recent graphs above... gain droop on the high-frequency side of the curve, and a group delay curve where the low-frequency peak is higher than the high-frequency peak.
I don't know yet whether the filter is seeing an impedance with an R that's too high, or one with an X that's too far from zero... could be both of course. |
Re: Ceramic filter measurement
I have the Murata data sheet here, and for a 180 ceramic filter, your groupI'd very much appreciate postings of the PDFs of the filter data sheets, Bob. A lot of the information on the older parts is getting hard to locate. |
Re: Ceramic filter measurement
I have a few Model 18s and a Model 19 receiver. The Model 19 schematic is
attached; note no transformers. What do you make of it?Oh, that's a beauty! Individual IF filters tunable inductors and caps - five adjustments per section, each. That really is something. I wouldn't personally want to try fiddling with those filters without a _lot_ of careful thinking up front... the alignment procedure is probably a whole cave-full of hungry bears. Mark the starting positions carefully!!! The good news is, this is going to be pretty easy to drive and measure, I think, as long as you look at the whole IF strip as a unit, because you're not actually driving any of the filters directly. The input side of each filter bank is driven from its own transistor amp and isolated from whatever you might do outside, and all but the last of the filter bank outputs is also isolated from the outside. Take a look at the "IF input from front end". This has a very high input impedance... 470 kOhms, in parallel with the input impedance of the Q301 JFET (which will be extremely high at DC, and somewhat capacitive at 10.7 MHz). The L332 input inductor (between the jack and the gate of the JFET) might be there to cancel out the capacitive reactance... I haven't crunched the numbers to see. Anyhow, I suspect that the best way to drive this input is to use a simple three-way T connector - NanoVNA drive port on one leg, the tuner's IF input connected to the other, and a good 50-ohm resistor connected to the third to terminate the drive signal. This will give you a high S11 return loss, and provide plenty of signal to drive the JFET. You _might_ need to pad down the NanoVNA drive signal to keep from overloading the JFET and saturating the whole IF chain. On the output side... well, this may be a bit trickier. R317 (coming out of the last filter) is 2.7k, so the filter won't see less than that. When I look at the next stage of the schematic (the limiter assembly) I see this signal driving right into the base of a BJT, whose emitter is AC-bypassed to ground... so, the input impedance of the limiter is going to be quite low (a few tens of ohms at a guess - I'd have to evaluate the limiter schematic and figure out what sort of current they're running through its first transistor). So, odds are, you could just run this output into the 50-ohm input of a NanoVNA's second port, and the impedance would be OK. A safety "gotcha" here, though... this IF strip has some gain in it due to the input and interstage-buffer transistors! The signal coming out of the output will probably be larger than the signal going in - I'm not sure how much. You don't want to risk overloading the bridge and mixer in your NanoVNA's second port. It would probably be wise to stick something like a 20 dB 50-ohm attenuator pad between the IF strip output and the NanoVNA input at first... do a sweep and see what your peak gain is. Then, consider reducing the amount of padding until you're close to a 0 dB insertion loss. Fortunately there isn't any DC imposed on either the input or output of this IF strip (according to the schematic) so you don't need to worry about that... I don't think any of the +/-12 can get through to the analyzer in either direction... ... unless you've got a fault on the board. Wouldn't hurt to isolate both the input and the output from the NanoVNA with .1 uF caps, just to be safe. This receiver really is a beautiful example of a fully-discrete transistor design from its era. |
Re: Ceramic filter measurement
Do you know a Marantz receiver/tuner model number? Is a schematic available?I have a few Model 18s and a Model 19 receiver. The Model 19 schematic is attached; note no transformers. What do you make of it? The 18 has a BJT input stage vs. the 19's JFET, and the 18 has no AGC for its passive front end. -- I_B_Nbridgema |
Re: Ceramic filter measurement
I have the Murata data sheet here, and for a 180 ceramic filter, your group delay plot looks normal. Murata does not show data beyond +/- 150 kHz, though, and the y axis scale is 1 dB / divison, 6 dB total, so be careful making comparisons to other plots not scaled the same. I can post that pdf page for the GDT filters, showing a small version of all the plots, in you want.
PS thanks for the heads up to see what's going on here Dave. Bob |
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