Rune,
I forgot some information about the NanoVNA Saver Cal:
If I calibrate my NanaVNA full span and save it to Cal 0 can I calibrate via NanoVNA Saver the same full span using 10 "Segments" to Cal 0?
For HF work - Can I calibrate my NanaVNA 1-30Mnz and save it to Cal 1 and then I calibrate via NanoVNA Saver the same 1-30Mhz span using 10 "Segments" to Cal 1?
Mike N2MS
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On November 13, 2019 at 10:39 AM n2msqrp <msangelo@...> wrote:
Rune,
Let me see if I understand this.
If I calibrate my NanaVNA full span and save it to Cal 0 can I calibrate via NanoVNA Saver the same full span using 10 "Segments"?
For HF work can I If I calibrate my NanaVNA 1-30Mnz and save it to Cal 1 and then I calibrate via NanoVNA Saver the same 1-30Mhz span using 10 "Segments"?
Mike N2MS
On November 13, 2019 at 2:12 AM Rune Broberg <mihtjel@...> wrote:
Hi Barry,
I don't know that you would need to do the whole copy around thing. I
haven't tried it, but I think it would work fine selecting a calibration
slot, slot 1 for example, and then using NanoVNA-Saver with the device with
that calibration active in the calibrated range.
*However*: My personal preference is to have Cal 0 be full span, and then
making a calibration within NanoVNA-Saver, using the calibration assistant,
with the "Segments" count set to perhaps 10 or even 20 - which gives you
1010 or 2020 data points for the calibration. This calibration can be full
span, or for the range you are interested in. You can then save this, or
any other calibration you make, as files which you can name more
intuitively than "cal 0", "cal 1" etc. ;-)