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Re: Dummy Antenna and FM Alignment
The impedance presented to the front-end can affect tuned-circuit tracking and Q in the RF amplifier, which can affect receiver sensitivity. It can affect receiver selectivity if the tuned circuits
By Brian Beezley · #40014 ·
Re: Dummy Antenna and FM Alignment
If you need to do an alignment on an FM radio you need an RF signal generator not a VNA. In my case I used the TinySA to generate the IF frequency, probably 10.7 MHz in your case, and the RF
By Terry W7AMI · #40013 ·
Re: Dummy Antenna and FM Alignment
I remember a form of low loss cable that was popular in the 1980-90's the size of rg-8 (can't remember the brandname). It had a spiral plastic dielectric and I used a run of it for a UHF antenna.?
By Joe · #40012 ·
Re: Dummy Antenna and FM Alignment
exactly. You want low epsilon of the dielectric and foam tube or a spiral of plastic meets the requirement nicely. To that extent it's like minimizing dielectric losses in microwave cables, but for
By Jim Lux · #40011 ·
Re: Dummy Antenna and FM Alignment
Maybe that explains an automobile antenna I found once in the past.? I was surprised that what looked like coax was actually a piece of plastic tubing, maybe 1/4" I.D., with a thin wire running
By Joe · #40010 ·
Re: Dummy Antenna and FM Alignment
The big requirement for coax on voltage probes is low capacitance - you generally don't worry about impedance. That's because the antenna is largely capacitive (so it looks like a voltage in series
By Jim Lux · #40009 ·
Re: Dummy Antenna and FM Alignment
What I would do is use a NanoVNA to measure the impedance over 88-108 MHz right at the connector that plugs into the radio. Average the measurements for several cars. Then design a network that
By Brian Beezley · #40008 ·
Re: Dummy Antenna and FM Alignment
The high-Z coaxial cable is more for the AM portion of the radio. On AM frequencies, especially the European version, the "stinger" antenna is nothing but a capacitive probe. Consequently, it
By W0LEV · #40007 ·
Dummy Antenna and FM Alignment
Hey everyone, True beginner in RF here for a classic alignment question. Sorry if this is inappropriate or the wrong group, I'm not sure where to ask such question. I suppose the NanoVNA would be a
By AArnaud · #40006 ·
Re: NANO VNA H4 , Implausible measurement results?
If you used this BNC to Banana adapter, you are adding about 2 pF or so of shunt capacitance across the feed point of your test dipole. At 500 MHz for example, this is about Xc = 159 ohms. This
By WB2UAQ · #40005 ·
Re: Measurement correction for Zc Coax caracteristic Impedance
This is the part of LF model that don’t work basically because is the wrong frequency region…
By Patricio Greco · #40004 ·
Re: Measurement correction for Zc Coax caracteristic Impedance
Hi Patricio Thanks for clarification , I do not understand this graphic zone circled on red color below 73's Nizar
By Team-SIM SIM-Mode · #40003 ·
Re: Measurement correction for Zc Coax caracteristic Impedance
This chart shows the typical behaviour of a loosy coaxial cable over frequency. Basically there are two models , the low frequency model in this case the dielectric loose are very small then G tends
By Patricio Greco · #40002 ·
Re: Measurement correction for Zc Coax caracteristic Impedance
Hi With same coax, same method, same NanoVNA H4 (1.2.40 DiSlord) surprisingly i have some different Zc values for 50Mhz & 100Mhz 50Mhz ---> Zc = 49.0 Ohm 100Mhz ---> Zc = 43.5 Ohm 73's Nizar
By Team-SIM SIM-Mode · #40001 ·
Re: Measurement correction for Zc Coax caracteristic Impedance
Hi Patricio I do not understand this chart, can you explaine it more pse. 73's Nizar
By Team-SIM SIM-Mode · #40000 ·
Re: Measurement correction for Zc Coax caracteristic Impedance
Oops! I should have R >> jwL, not R >> jwC. My error. 73, Maynard W6PAP
By Maynard Wright, P. E., W6PAP · #39999 ·
Re: Measurement correction for Zc Coax caracteristic Impedance
An interesting chart. Note that below about 300 kHz, the imaginary component of the characteristic impedance can no longer be ignored and, if you are working on any cables at voice frequencies or
By Maynard Wright, P. E., W6PAP · #39998 ·
Re: Measurement correction for Zc Coax caracteristic Impedance
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By Patricio Greco · #39997 ·
Re: Measurement correction for Zc Coax caracteristic Impedance
Hi Jim Lux "L , C & R exhibit some frequency-dependent variation; they do not have a perfectly flat response across frequency. This behavior depends on the dielectric material used, skin effect
By Team-SIM SIM-Mode · #39996 ·
Re: Measurement correction for Zc Coax caracteristic Impedance
Not unexpected Zc is sqrt( (R+jomegaL)/(G+jomegaC)) Mostly determined by L/C, but the R is in there too, and it goes up as frequency goes up, because of skin effect. For HF the dielectric loss (G) is
By Jim Lux · #39995 ·