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Re: Help with LPF Measurement
Please measure S21 instead of S11 using the NANOVNA! All S11 tells us is
the match (which is pretty bad!). Dave - W?LEV On Thu, Mar 13, 2025 at 12:14?AM Mitch NK3H via groups.io <mitch= [email protected]> wrote: Thank you Alan. I've attached an image of the whole setup including the-- *Dave - W?LEV* -- Dave - W?LEV |
Re: Help with LPF Measurement
Thank you Alan. I've attached an image of the whole setup including the filter, the test rig and the VNA. Please note that I'm just using hookup wire to connect the filter to the testing rig--no SMA or BNC connectors. It made no visible difference when testing on the scope using the wires or direct to a leg of the input and output capacitors. The other image is with a wire connecting the input to the output of the test right. The result is 0db flat across the range for S21. The signal generator has 50 ohm output impedance, and the scope has a very high impedance input. Not sure about the VNA. I tried the setup with a 50 ohm resistor to ground on the filter output and found no difference in the VNA behavior. Thanks for your help. 73, Mitch NK3H
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Re: Help with LPF Measurement
1) Please post a schematic (already requested).
2) Did you measure the individual components before constructing the filter with them? 3) We assume the filter is designed for 50-ohms in and out? (already assumed) 4) Is the dielectric of the capacitors appropriate for the frequency range? 5) Instead of using the o'scope and FFT, please give us a plot of S21 using the NANOVNA. Please use SAVER (or equivalent) to accomplish your sweep with more points than are available on the native instrument. 6) If your signal generator can sweep, you can also measure the filter response with that. A flat output noise generator can also be used instead of the swept sig. gen. Dave - W?LEV On Wed, Mar 12, 2025 at 11:11?PM Mitch NK3H via groups.io <mitch= [email protected]> wrote: I've searched through the message list looking for symptoms similar to-- *Dave - W?LEV* -- Dave - W?LEV |
Re: Help with LPF Measurement
One last item, on your scope pulse gen measurement. Dial your pulse gen
back to 100 kHz, you should see the fidelity of the square wave as measured at the output load termination R. As you increase frequency, the fidelity of the square wave will suffer, of course, and for the most part you should see a sine wave attenuated at the pulse input frequency. |
Re: Help with LPF Measurement
Confirmed and looks ok... Mitch.
Assume that your layout is such that the inductors are ideally non coupled to each other, ideal each at right angles. The connectors are panel mount? Soldered their body to ground and center conductor to the input pads. A photo of you filter card would be useful. In any case, re calibrate and then check your calibration is ok by checking your through cable fiving a S21 of nearly 0 dB and a S11 of at least 20 dB or better. |
Help with LPF Measurement
I've searched through the message list looking for symptoms similar to mine and didn't find anything. I'm somewhat new to this and would appreciate any help you can offer.
I've been trying to get my NanoVNA-F (firmware 1.0.5) to show the results of a 40-meter low pass filter I've built. I know I'm doing something wrong here but can't figure it out. The VNA image is calibrated (including pass-thru), set for the range 6.5 to 29 MHz and logmag S21. Shouldn't this give a flat area leading up to the design frequency followed by a significant roll off through the remainder of the frequency range? My setup is very similar to W2AEW's YouTube demonstration of the NanoVNA with a LPF but gives entirely different results. The image is entirely different, with very large insertion loss and a steep area of suppression peaking at 11 MHz followed by a steep recovery. I worried that my filter wasn't what I thought it was so I tested it with a 7 MHz square wave, looking at input and output with the FFT function of my 'scope. The before and after images show several things: (1) the square wave (yellow trace) is hardly a square wave. It wasn't much of one before attaching to the input of the filter but it's definitely loaded and distorted by the filter. (I can live with the distortion in the test, since the filter is supposed to reduce the high freq distortion anyway, right?) (2) The purple trace is the filter output--pretty nice sine wave. (3) The FFT shows a good 40+ db suppression of the harmonics, especially the odd numbers. So the filter seems to be doing its job. There may be some things not right about my testing of the filter using signal generator and oscilloscope -- I'm new at this. For example, the shoulder on the filter output at about 10 MHz is troublesome, but still the logmag S21 output shouldn't be affected, should it? Any help in understanding why my results look as they do would be greatly appreciated. Best & 73, Mitch NK3H |
Re: VNA-F V2 brand new screen black
I would return it. Alternatively check with the manufacturer if your unit
is genuine and that their warranty policy is. On Tue, 11 Mar 2025 at 23:23, alsodanev2 via groups.io <alsodanev2= [email protected]> wrote: I got it from an auction site called nellis auctions. They sell surplus |
Re: #firmware #nanovna-h
#firmware
#nanovna-h
I managed to get it work with v1.2.40 firmware from DiSlord and the DfuSe Demo software.
Initially I was using the wrong path to update the firmware, essentially uploading instead of updating, like in the photo. Rookie mistake.
success nanovna .png
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WhatsApp Image 2025-03-11 at 15.24.49_aa8b1993.jpg
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WhatsApp Image 2025-03-11 at 15.25.32_144b0534.jpg
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#firmware #nanovna-h
#firmware
#nanovna-h
Hello everyone!
I managed to brick my nanoVNA H (clone, as I've found later on this forum) and now it is showing a white screen. First of all, I should have read this forum before the purchase and buy the real thing, but the product looked legit at the first glance. Second, I should've made a copy of the initial firmware before I install the new one. But what is done is done and I'm looking forward for a posible solution. Do you know what firmware came with this thing in the first place, to help me roll back? Since it is a sofware problem I imagine it can be done, but the seller didn't provided his support. Thank you! There are some pictures with the front, back and inside the nanaVNA. |
Re: VNA-F V2 brand new screen black
You might start with stating where you got it from?
On Tue, 11 Mar 2025 at 02:19, alsodanev2 via groups.io <alsodanev2= [email protected]> wrote: So i have in front of me a brand new in package/container: a brand new -f |
VNA-F V2 brand new screen black
So i have in front of me a brand new in package/container: a brand new -f v2
All metal housing, protective plastic on screen. Upon start. Turn on. Screen flashes white then goes dark. Very faint lines and bars visible. This is a brand new unit. I am disinclined to take apart and mess with internals. Should i return? Warranty? How good is the company/manufacturer customer service? |
NanoVNA-H version 3.6.1_SM_ST - ZEETK?
I have NanoVNA-H version 3.6.1_SM_ST. I had 1.2.27 (20.02.2024) from the factory.
During startup I had dashes, colored stripes on the screen. I downloaded new software from hugen79 in version 1.2.43. I chose the NanoVNA-H-ZK 2.8-inch NanoVNA-H using SJWCH5351 as signal source, machine label hardware version ZK or SM_ST ending because nan SM_ST. Did I do it right? MODE ZEETK generator system has now appeared. Should I stay on ZEETK or change to Si5351 or MS5351? |
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