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Re: help nanovnasaver Mint22.1

 

Hi Paul,

Thank you, installing via apt JustWorks! I am using it an it's great!

I had been attempting an install from? github. Later this weekend
I will send feedback to you with screenshots on how I could not get it
to work.

Cheers, Rod

On 5/17/25 12:02, Paul Hardcastle via groups.io wrote:
Hi Rod,

Did you have trouble installing it, or you install it and it doesn't
run?

I have mint mate (i.e. not cinnamon). I can't recall if it is 22 or
22.1. ?All I did was 'sudo apt install nanovna-saver' and it installed
from the standard repos. For me that did 'just work'. No issues running
it after either.

I didn't have to worry about python versions - the software manager and
repos looked after that for me.

On my previous system (a 2019 vintage ubuntu mate) I did have to add in
a compatible python version, but not on my current system.

Did you try installing from standard repos? If that fails please tell
us how, and any error messages you get.

Best regards,
Paul Hardcastle
G7SLP (A65DR/KW4CM etc)




On Sat, 2025-05-17 at 08:53 -0700, Rod via groups.io wrote:
Hello,

Using Mint22.1

All attempts to install NVNAsaver have failed B/C ssl problems,
including the instructions at

/g/nanovna-users/files/NanoVNA%20PC%20Software/NanoVNA-Saver/nvna-s-pve-rev-d.pdf

I have spent two days on this, and I would greatly appreciate any
help
(that JustWorks!)
installing NanoVnaSaver on Mint 22.1

Thanks,

Rod










Re: help nanovnasaver Mint22.1

 

Hi Rod,

Did you have trouble installing it, or you install it and it doesn't
run?

I have mint mate (i.e. not cinnamon). I can't recall if it is 22 or
22.1. ?All I did was 'sudo apt install nanovna-saver' and it installed
from the standard repos. For me that did 'just work'. No issues running
it after either.

I didn't have to worry about python versions - the software manager and
repos looked after that for me.

On my previous system (a 2019 vintage ubuntu mate) I did have to add in
a compatible python version, but not on my current system.

Did you try installing from standard repos? If that fails please tell
us how, and any error messages you get.

Best regards,
Paul Hardcastle
G7SLP (A65DR/KW4CM etc)

On Sat, 2025-05-17 at 08:53 -0700, Rod via groups.io wrote:
Hello,

Using Mint22.1

All attempts to install NVNAsaver have failed B/C ssl problems,
including the instructions at

/g/nanovna-users/files/NanoVNA%20PC%20Software/NanoVNA-Saver/nvna-s-pve-rev-d.pdf

I have spent two days on this, and I would greatly appreciate any
help
(that JustWorks!)
installing NanoVnaSaver on Mint 22.1

Thanks,

Rod








Re: READING L AN C VALUES USING THE NANOVNAs and the SMITH CHART

 

All:

In my recently emailed out method of measuring inductors and capacitors
using the Smith Chart presentation on the NANOVNAs, I seriously also
considered treating accuracy and determination of SRF. At the time of
writing, I chose not to include these subjects to keep it on a simple basis
for those visiting this for the first time or those not familiar with the
Smith Chart or the VNA in general. When all the comments are in, I may add
those items as well, as, if it were aimed at those familiar with the VNA
and Smith Chart, I certainly would have included them.

Thanks for the inputs (for the future).

Dave - W?LEV

On Sat, May 17, 2025 at 5:07?PM Roger Need via groups.io <sailtamarack=
[email protected]> wrote:

On Sat, May 17, 2025 at 09:56 AM, Roger Need wrote:


? Components (resistive and reactive) with an impedance range of
approximately 1 to3K can be measured with reasonable accuracy using the
1 port
S11 shunt method
Below are plots of a 3K SMD resistor and a 1 ohm resistor. Also a 10 pF
capacitor which shows good results over a wide reactance range. Note that
you need a good test jig and this becomes critical when measuring higher
frequencies.

Roger





--

*Dave - W?LEV*


--
Dave - W?LEV


Re: READING L AN C VALUES USING THE NANOVNAs and the SMITH CHART

 

On Sat, May 17, 2025 at 09:56 AM, Roger Need wrote:


? Components (resistive and reactive) with an impedance range of
approximately 1 to3K can be measured with reasonable accuracy using the 1 port
S11 shunt method
Below are plots of a 3K SMD resistor and a 1 ohm resistor. Also a 10 pF capacitor which shows good results over a wide reactance range. Note that you need a good test jig and this becomes critical when measuring higher frequencies.

Roger


Re: READING L AN C VALUES USING THE NANOVNAs and the SMITH CHART

 

Comments by Jean-Roger, Nizar and others concerning accuracy of S11 shunt measurements inspired me to write this post.

The accuracy of any measurement is important and an excellent paper on this subject was
written by Brian Walker of Copper Mountain Technologies (a VNA manufacturer).
"Make Accurate Impedance Measurements Using a VNA" available from


This paper has been discussed on groups.io before and has been subject to misinterpretation
by myself and others. So I contacted the author and he was kind enough to answer my
questions and send me his spreadsheet for error analysis. The paper goes into considerable depth on how to calculate the impedance measurement and an error equation is derived to calculate ¦¤S11(max).

The author then goes on to derive ¦¤S11 for a Copper Mountain Technologies S5065 VNA which can measure from 9 kHz to 6.5 GHz with a reflection accuracy (S11) specified to be ¡À0.4 dB for measurements from ?15 to 0 dB. The curves and charts in his article are all based on THIS specification. They are NOT applicable to the NanoVNA which has better performance when used over a much narrower frequency range.

I wrote a technical note that provides more detail on his paper and how it can be applied to the NanoVNA. I hope you find it informative. It can be downloaded from my Box account at the link below"


A summary of the report is as follows:
? The NanoVNA is capable of making accurate measurements of component parameters provided that quality calibration loads and a proper test jig are used.
? Components (resistive and reactive) with an impedance range of approximately 1 to3K can be measured with reasonable accuracy using the 1 port S11 shunt method
? The uncertainty of measuring the S11 reflection coefficient will determine the error to be expected when measuring components.

Roger


help nanovnasaver Mint22.1

 

Hello,

Using Mint22.1

All attempts to install NVNAsaver have failed B/C ssl problems, including the instructions at

/g/nanovna-users/files/NanoVNA%20PC%20Software/NanoVNA-Saver/nvna-s-pve-rev-d.pdf

I have spent two days on this, and I would greatly appreciate any help (that JustWorks!)
installing NanoVnaSaver on Mint 22.1

Thanks,

Rod


Re: READING L AN C VALUES USING THE NANOVNAs and the SMITH CHART

 

"Because in case one is measuring a reactive component at a frequency
range of interest, which coincidentally is around the self resonant
frequency."

On the silver mica new unit the leads are about 1.5 inches and using both leads, ~ 50 nH. The 130 pF in Dave's pdf might
have a SRF at 62 MHz (1/root(LC)). So as a rule of thumb a measurement at 1/10th or near
the 40 meter band is appropriate.


Re: READING L AN C VALUES USING THE NANOVNAs and the SMITH CHART

 

Hi Nizar,

Be careful with this NanoVNA accuracy sheet. It remains indicative, and as you say, accuracy remains dependent from hardware bridge and calibration load. The initial purpose of this picture here is to show that depending circumstances, it is sometimes relevant to choose another measurement method, than the common s11 one.

In the context of this topic (s11 measurement), you can't totally rely on these relative error measurement values. But for example if you get an X=1000 ohms value or higher, you are sure not to be in a confident frequency range, for capacitor or inductance measurement. Here, we have to consider this graph (configuration 1), as an helper here, no more.

73 - Jean-Roger


Re: READING L AN C VALUES USING THE NANOVNAs and the SMITH CHART

 

Hi Jean

Your NanoVNA accuracy Shart is Very Nice : imposed naturaly by the S11 NanoVNA hardware 50 Ohm bridge , indeed S11 accuracy is better around 50 Ohm bridge resistor : S11 accurate prety good 3% from 10 Ohm to 200 Ohm , Calibration Load should be known as accurate as possible.

73's Nizar


Re: READING L AN C VALUES USING THE NANOVNAs and the SMITH CHART

 

Thank you Dave. It is a quite interesting overview.

I just suggest to add an advice about having also an eye of the jX (reactance) value. The idea is to check that this value combined with R (Z module) remains in a relevant accuracy field of measurement for the NanoVNA. See captures below.

1: 10 pF capacitor @ 145 MHz : R and C values
2: 10 pF capacitor @ 145 MHz : R and X values
3: Indicative accuracy for s11 measurement (configuration1), suggested Z module limits for a maximum relative error measurement of 3%, between 10 ohms and 200 ohms. The previous capacitor result of the measurement respects this criteria.

73 - Jean-Roger


Re: Smith Charts

 

I just implemented a simple method to freeze the automatic scaling. While the numbers are the same, this capacitance comparison is much more compelling.

Brian


Re: Protection from ESD / RF

 

Thanks for all the information and suggestions. I will chose a low cost option and have learned to be more thoughtful and careful with this wonderful tool. I have learned a lot from it and have a replacement on the way. Thanks again for your expert advice.
Terry K3JT.


Re: Protection from ESD / RF

 

It was the H4 . Purchased from R&L. I accept the blame for the damage. The nano was not defective.


Re: Smith Charts

 

Here's an example of what the Y21 method can do. The plots are for an ATC 2.7 pF capacitor. The VNA was an HP 8722D with Inter-Continental test fixture and calibration kit. Self-resonance is about 9.4 GHz. The first image compares capacitance results for the Y21 method and the conventional S21 series-through method. The second image compares dissipation factor results. S11 and S22 are identical as are S21 and S12 at the 0.01 dB and 0.01 degree file resolution.

K6JCA's writeup on the Y21 method:



Brian


Re: Protection from ESD / RF

 

There is also a large family of low-capacitance limiter diodes from a
number of (non-Chinese) sources designed specifically for the purpose if
you choose to build your own. They are readily available from standard
suppliers like Mouser and Digikey. They are not expensive.

Again, the use of these limiters does not guarantee a silver bullet in
preventing damage.

Dave - W?LEV



On Fri, May 16, 2025 at 5:21?PM WS1M - bammi via groups.io <jbammi=
[email protected]> wrote:


As Dave mentioned limiters like mini-circuits VLM-33W-2W-S+ are a good
solution. Unfortunately these are hard to get as they are being
re-designed, and ebay sellers know this and have jacked up prices to mafia
levels.
Fortunately for us, another great solution is the equivalent TAPR, their
limiter can be purchased from here

Please *Note* that the TAPR version is only spec'ed up to 6M (54 MHz) and
is not as wide bandwidth as the mini-circuits that goes up much higher.
Please read the description on the above page before buying.

Another option is the receiver guard from DX engineering


This has an operating range 500 kHz to 150 MHz - still not as wide band
as the mini-circuits and has limitation on the lower frequencies unlike the
mini-circuits or the TAPR limiters. This unit has BNC connectors and not
SMA.

There are many pin-diode based limiters on eBay/Aliexpress, none of them
have clear specs, so buyer beware.

Also please note the presence of such limiters still does not guarantee
full protection due to limits of input power, output leakage, recovery time
and non linear behavior outside the defined bandwidth. In any case you
cannot willy-nilly pump watts into these, things will still go up in smoke!
You still need to attenuate and/or use a good quality sampler (see w2aew's
videos on these topics, all of his videos are so excellent)
If you are so inclined, I can suggest starting with this and then search
for all related videos


--
73 de ws1m
bammi





--

*Dave - W?LEV*


--
Dave - W?LEV


Re: Protection from ESD / RF

 

As Dave mentioned limiters like mini-circuits VLM-33W-2W-S+ are a good solution. Unfortunately these are hard to get as they are being re-designed, and ebay sellers know this and have jacked up prices to mafia levels.
Fortunately for us, another great solution is the equivalent TAPR, their limiter can be purchased from here

Please *Note* that the TAPR version is only spec'ed up to 6M (54 MHz) and is not as wide bandwidth as the mini-circuits that goes up much higher. Please read the description on the above page before buying.

Another option is the receiver guard from DX engineering

This has an operating range 500 kHz to 150 MHz - still not as wide band as the mini-circuits and has limitation on the lower frequencies unlike the mini-circuits or the TAPR limiters. This unit has BNC connectors and not SMA.

There are many pin-diode based limiters on eBay/Aliexpress, none of them have clear specs, so buyer beware.

Also please note the presence of such limiters still does not guarantee full protection due to limits of input power, output leakage, recovery time and non linear behavior outside the defined bandwidth. In any case you cannot willy-nilly pump watts into these, things will still go up in smoke! You still need to attenuate and/or use a good quality sampler (see w2aew's videos on these topics, all of his videos are so excellent)
If you are so inclined, I can suggest starting with this and then search for all related videos


--
73 de ws1m
bammi


Re: Bricked

 

Got it wrking now. It was a cable. I tried 4 till I got it wrk. And still only one firmware worked on it also


Re: READING L AN C VALUES USING THE NANOVNAs and the SMITH CHART

 

QUOTE:
Good overview. I think it is worth to add a little bit more to point 2
of the recommendations.
Because in case one is measuring a reactive component at a frequency
range of interest, which coincidentally is around the self resonant
frequency.
Maybe selecting a low frequency range first.
UNQUOTE

You're right, Kees. When I wrote the second "RECOMMENDATION", I seriously
considered including a caution to first do a wide sweep which may include
the self resonant frequency. I decided not to include that and keep the
thread focused on the task at hand to keep it simple for those unfamiliar
with these types of measurement. I did seriously consider adding your
suggestion. Thank you. Maybe after more comments, I'll go back and
incorporate additional information based on feedback.

Dave - W?LEV

On Fri, May 16, 2025 at 10:18?AM PE0CWK via groups.io <pe0cwk=
[email protected]> wrote:

Dave,

Good overview. I think it is worth to add a little bit more to point 2
of the recommendations.
Because in case one is measuring a reactive component at a frequency
range of interest, which coincidentally is around the self resonant
frequency.
Maybe selecting a low frequency range first.

73,
Kees PE0CWK


Op 16-5-2025 om 01:18 schreef W0LEV via groups.io:
I've had several requests on reading the values of inductors and
capacitors
using the NANOVNAs. I've put that together in the attachment to this
email. If you want to learn how it's done using the NANOVNA's and the
Smith Chart presentation, the attachment should be of interest to you.
For
the write-up, I've used the H4 version of the NANOVNA, but everything
should be applicable to any version of the NANOs or professional VNAs.
So,
don't belabor the point that .....waaahhhh....waaahhhh......I don't have
the H4. The technique is applicable to any vector network analyzer.

So, if interested, have a read of the attachment.

Dave - W?LEV






--

*Dave - W?LEV*


--
Dave - W?LEV


Re: Smith Charts

 

On Fri, May 16, 2025 at 09:18 AM, alan victor wrote:


You (I) can turn intepolation off.

That would be fine.

I think some of the L & C vendors that offer Touchstone files generate them from simulations, not from raw VNA data. I don't think they're trying to hide any issues with their parts. They may just want to clean up the data. Whenever S11 and S22 are identical, I suspect a simulation. I can also check with the Y21 series-through measurement method. It suppresses stray shunt capacitance. If Y21 and the usual S21 series-through method yield identical results, I think the data is simulated. I believe all component test fixtures, no matter how carefully designed and built, have some residual shunt capacitance.

Brian


Re: Smith Charts

 

Understood Brian. You (I) can turn intepolation off.
In any case, I suspect these measurements were done with TRL calibration on microstrip,

TRL cal does have bandwidth constraints and perhaps is the culprit introducing the gap.....