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Old March 18th 06, 11:48 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
Chris Jones
 
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Default Return Loss Bridge Accuracy Questions

CA wrote:

My homebrew RLB uses a current balun. Some turns of thin 50 Ohm coax on a
ferrite core. The core is from a scrapped Siemens inductor. I have
acheived good performance between 0,1 to 200 MHz with this technique. I
first tried the twisted pair winding approach but the current balun was
far better.

Chris SM6PXJ

wrote:
I have just built an HF return loss bridge according to the info in
"Solid State design for the Radio Amateur". While it works ok, I was
hoping for a bit better performance. Clearly the "balun" doesn't have
enough inductance to operate well below 10 MHz or so (10 turns bifilar
#30 AWG enamelled wire on Amidon T23-43, as specified in the book -
twisted pair, which isn't specified one way or the other in the
book). This can probably be largely fixed by using a larger ferrite
core (T37-43's available in junkbox). I am interested primarily in
the
1.8-50 MHz range, though I wouldn't complain if it worked on 2m too.

But even at 30 MHz a reasonably good microwave 50 ohm load gives only
about 28 dB apparent return loss...Not bad, but I might have expected
a bit more.

And an open and short give about 2 dB different signal levels at 30
MHz. That is with big pads (20 dB attenuation) on both the signal
generator and detector. The detector is an HF receiver with a step
attenuator used to maintain a constant S-meter reading.

The circuit is built on a small PC board using construction techniques
typical for the UHF or low microwave range (except that the test port
connector is an SO-239), and is enclosed in a shielded box. Each of
the three 50 ohm resistors is made of two 100 ohm 1206 chip resistors
in parallel and measures between 50.0 and 50.3 ohms at DC.

Has anyone with experience with this circuit any suggestions for how
to tweak it for best performance ? What accuracy level have you
achieved ? Do you know where I might find an error analysis for this
circuit ? Or if I am to think about errors myself, does anyone know
how to model the balun in SPICE ?

73,
Steve VE3SMA


If you could give more details of how to build your circuit, or a photo of
it, I'd appreciate that.

Chris