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Re: Common ground and 2-port measuring
Have you used it with nanoVNA tests?I haven't, Ed, but N6LF has. What I like about this particular transformer is that the passband is very flat. That reduces any calibration error that may arise from interpolation between frequency samples. Check the datasheet for a version with even wider frequency response that is not quite as flat. Brian |
Re: Common ground and 2-port measuring
On Wed, Jul 20, 2022 at 05:42 PM, Dragan Milivojevic wrote:
Thanks, but sc-hub.se is blocked in UK, so no access. |
Measuring characteristic impedance of shielded twisted pair
#nanovna-h4
#cables
#matching
Hello - Totally new to VNA here...
I want to measure the characteristic impedance of 120 ohm shielded twisted pair wire. I know that you can measure it for 50 ohm coax using the NanoVNA but I wondered if there was any reason why it wouldn't work for non-50 ohm twisted-pair? The purpose of measurement is to make sure I fit the best termination resistors for long runs (100m ish) of cable for CAN bus cable. I do have a Siglent SSA3032X plus spectrum analyser for which there is a return loss bridge (RB3X25) but at around ?400. I'm not sure whether that would be useable for that kind of measurement, especially as the cable isn't 50 ohms. I assume the NanoVNA probably is suitable for measuring the 120 ohm pair and can probably offer more functionality even if some of the specs of the Siglent are rather better!? If so, what's the shortest length of twisted pair I could sensibly make measurements on? I have some 1m samples of cable which I would like to evaluate. The final cable runs will be in the order of 100m. BTW I know I can also fire a pulse down the cable and match with a variable resistor when the cable is easily accessible (and I might do that too) but I am interested to know if the NanoVNA would be useful for this and also, in some circumstances, I won't be able to get to the far end of some cables. Would it be necessary to normalise to something other than 50 ohms? Would I need any other components or equipment to do the test (apart form connectors to physically connect)? I have some other applications for the NanoVNA too, so I will probably get one (I was thinking NanoVNA H4 although there seems to be a bewlidering number of variants). I'd just like to know if it is suitable for this measurement as well. Or... if I could do everything with a Siglent RF bridge, maybe that would be a better focus as I already have the SA. Thanks. |
Re: checking inductance
On 7/21/22 3:56 AM, DougVL wrote:
On Tue, Jul 19, 2022 at 09:00 AM, Jim Lux wrote:Long enough for the synthesizers to stabilize, then capture ADC samples of the 5kHz output from the mixer for the receivers. A few milliseconds.Sorry, my mistake. I thought that length would be called a pulse.Sure, it's pulsed, but the reason I describe it as CW is that the measurement is not made with looking at the reflection of a transmitted pulse as in a radar. It's a pulsed CW measurement, and the measurement is made at the same time as the source is on. The entire sweep is a few hundred milliseconds. |
Re: checking inductance
On Tue, Jul 19, 2022 at 09:00 AM, Jim Lux wrote:
Sorry, my mistake. How long does the CW signal last, at 101 measurement points? I thought that length would be called a pulse. (In my Air Force AC&W radar technician days, a 6 millisecond transmission was called a pulse.) -- Doug, K8RFT |
Re: Common ground and 2-port measuring
THANKS!!!
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Op do 21 jul. 2022 om 02:42 schreef Dragan Milivojevic <
d.milivojevic@...>:
|
Re: Common ground and 2-port measuring
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On Tue, 19 Jul 2022 at 07:48, Ed G8FAX <ed@...> wrote:
Jim Lux wrote: ¡°google for "woodward balun balance quality 1983" ¡° |
Re: Correction of error introduce by a transmission line connect to the VNA port 1
Rather than cutting the cable, you should calibrate with the cable attached
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to the nanovna, attaching the calibration standards at the other end of the cable, using connector adapters if necessary. This way ensures that all aspects of the cable (length, loss, etc.) are compensated for by the calibration, perfectly removing all those circles from the smith chart. Stan On Wed, Jul 20, 2022, 2:18 PM Diane BONKOUNGOU <dianebonk2@...> wrote:
Hello Siegfried, |
Connector life and repeatability
For those looking for papers:
R. L. Jesch, "Repeatability of SMA coaxial connectors," in IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement, vol. IM-25, no. 4, pp. 314-320, Dec. 1976, doi: 10.1109/TIM.1976.6312234. At least 50 mate/demate cycles D. Bergfried and H. Fischer, "Insertion-Loss Repeatability versus Life of Some Coaxial Connectors," in IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement, vol. 19, no. 4, pp. 349-353, Nov. 1970, doi: 10.1109/TIM.1970.4313926. 10,000 cycles for 14mm GPC, 7mm GPC, N, SMA (gold plated ss, and plain SS) There's also a post by Rich NE1EE last may giving some data from Keysight /g/nanovna-users/message/28062 |
Re: nanoVNA for Nerds
Yes, a LARGE POWER attenuator (or several seriesed)
Dave - W ?LEV On Wed, Jul 20, 2022 at 9:52 PM Siegfried Jackstien < siegfried.jackstien@...> wrote: with a 60 db attenuator inline you could measure a 60 db amplifier ...-- *Dave - W?LEV* *Just Let Darwin Work* -- Dave - W?LEV |
Re: SMA to banana binding post
and if you want to keep the coax off then use sma to bnc and bnc to banana direct
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dg9bfc sigi ps nicely build with those pcb as open short load :-) i made a similar thingy for my capacitance/ inductance meter (even smallish smd caps can be measured that way) Am 20.07.2022 um 17:49 schrieb Roger Need via groups.io: Try reading this groups's Wiki to learn more about testing jigs to measure components. |
Re: nanoVNA for Nerds
with a 60 db attenuator inline you could measure a 60 db amplifier ... but in priciple you are right ... not really built for used inline after a rig ... but inline after an amp (with proper attenuation!!) yes that works
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to say it short RTFM!!!!!! dg9bfc sigi Am 20.07.2022 um 19:50 schrieb W0LEV: Any amateur radio operator using a NANOVNA (or even the TinySA) should |
Re: Low pass filter
On 7/20/22 13:53, Donald S Brant Jr wrote:
Your filter looks fine, no funny stuff in the response. You might try expanding the scale of the S21 trace downwards to see how far down you can see the harmonic attenuation.Cool. Here's a screenshot with only S21 on the lower left graph. 73 Stan KM4HQE |
Re: Correction of error introduce by a transmission line connect to the VNA port 1
Diane BONKOUNGOU
Hello Siegfried,
Thanks for your response. So If I cut more of my cable could I reduce the number of circles (the phase shift)?. I struggle to correct the delay with a lot of circles. Best regards. Le ven. 15 juil. 2022 ¨¤ 15:35, Siegfried Jackstien < siegfried.jackstien@...> a ¨¦crit : You have to calibrate at the cable end with open short load |
Re: SMA to banana binding post
On 7/20/22 10:12 AM, W0LEV wrote:
SMA connectors are for good two reasons: 1) Small size and 2)500 mate/demate cycles is typical spec sheet number, but I'd say that there are plenty of SMAs that have seen a lot more cycles and are just fine, as long as they're not bent or damaged. There's a paper out there by some folks at Maury Microwave, where they mated/demated an SMA thousands of times with the intent of understanding the degradation in repeatability. The reason a spec sheet calls out a number like 50 or 500 cycles is because that's a "testing" number that is bigger than the customer is likely to use, but which is small enough that the price is reasonable. Typically it would derived from some MIL-STD and is basically a statement that the connector will meet the requirements after that many cycles. Another thing to watch out for is a loss or mismatch spec. Most connectors do NOT have anywhere near the loss in the data sheet, it's more driven by the lowest number that is practical to measure in a manufacturing environment. So an SMA (Amphenol M39012) at 1 GHz is 0.06 dB max loss - that's pretty close to the minimum measurable loss at 1GHz without going to a lot of trouble. Likewise, the mismatch (VSWR) is given as 1.05 to 1.20 plus some frequency dependent factor. It would be hard to measure a VSWR of 1.01 (46 dB RL), even if that is what the connector usually is. Banana jacks/plugs work fine at HF but not at or above 50 MHz. BNCs andWell, I'd say that banana jacks and similar single pin connectors are something that you need be aware of the non-ideal nature. Fortunately, with a NanoVNA, one can actually measure that non-ideal. If you must, SO-239 / PL-259 connectors are *only* for HF use. TheirTrue, the UHF connector isn't constant impedance, however, if you have a set of calibration standards in UHF, then that is managed in the calibration. |
Re: SMA to banana binding post
My understanding is that SMA connectors were originally designed for interconnections inside equipment which are usually installed and then not touched, so that the limited durability was not a factor; low cost was. It was only when they began to be used in test equipment that its durability shortcomings became apparent.
An improved design, intermateable with SMA, but with superior perfomance and durability and intended for test equipment, is the 3.5mm connector (and its derivatives, 2.9mm, 2.4mm, ...1.0mm, etc.) However it is also a precision connector so quite costly; but I am often able to convince my clients to install them on front panels of new test equipment we design. Much of its improved performance is its use of air dielectric at the interface, which has more stable performance than the SMA's PTFE (Teflon?) interface with its variable air gap, and its beefier (thicker-walled) outer conductor construction. I have purged my shack of UHF connectors; all cables are type N, BNC, SMA/3.5mm, or type F for RX-only. High-quality adapters or (preferably) replacement of equipment connectors when practical were used. 73, Don N2VGU |
Re: SMA to banana binding post
thanks
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On Wed, Jul 20, 2022 at 2:03 PM W0LEV <davearea51a@...> wrote:
Try cutting double or single sided FR-4 board to the required shapes. |
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