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![]() David wrote: Can anyone post any informationon or web addresses on phase matching and batch / set matching of coax cables? I am interested in principles and procedures to phase match coax cables. Phase matching involves cutting coax cables to the same electrical length. The phase matched cables can then be analysed and put into batches or sets i.e. cables with similar characteristics and frequency response are put into a set. What would be analysed to form a set? This practice is used on coax cables that feed antennas for satellite systems. For example, if several antennas receive GPS signals, to triangulate position, the GPS signals must all arrive at a particular point at exactly the same time. It also appears that going for the best quality low loss cable can actually be worse, because using lower quality coax cable with some loss can dampen the reflections from in-line connectors. Stages are 1) phase matching 2) batch matching 3) assemble cables chosen by batch matching process onto RF system and perform vector generation. A vector gen file is created which is a calibration snapshot of the system i.e. records the RF performance in the form of a signature or footprint. Measuring instrument is a Network Analyser HP8753. I suppose you left out some (rather important) stages... The first one I'd put down is: select the cable. The physical design of the cable is important. Some cable changes appreciably when it flexes, and some changes appreciably as temperature changes. (If it changes significantly when the humidity changes, you've REALLY picked the wrong cable...) Cable with properly installed, high quality connectors should not show significant reflections from the connectors, and even if it does, if all the cables are assembled the same, the effect should be the same on all of them. Cable of a given physical size and general construction should have close to the same loss. If you want MORE loss, pick SMALLER cable, and especially pick cable with smaller inner conductor. Stranded conductors also help increase the loss. But if you have two similarly designed cables, and one shows appreciably more loss at GHz frequencies, definitely avoid it. The key reason is that whatever is causing the loss is likely the result of a poorly controlled manufacturing process, and that's something you do NOT want to put up with in precision matched cable assemblies. What exactly do you want to match? Phase as a function of frequency, over some particular range of frequencies? Attenuation, also over the range of frequencies? Something else? Some combination of characteristics? I would expect it would depend on the application. If you assume that the cable assemblies are linear, and that they are adequately represented for your application by a two-port model, then measure them with your vector network analyzer. Especially since you are going for MATCHING and apparently don't need absolute accuracy, let the analyzer (powered on) and the cables stabilize in the stable environment where you'll measure them, do a reasonable job calibrating the analyzer, measure each of the cables (S11, S21, S12, S22, over your range of frequencies), check the calibration of the VNA, remeasure the cables (or at least spot-check them) to be sure you get the same results the second time. If all is good, arrange the cables using whatever measure of match you need for your application. If you need matching over a range of temperatures, or where one cable is at a different temperature than the others, measure under those conditions. Note that if there are measurement errors, if your technique is consistent, those errors should be very nearly the same for each cable that measures the same: matching will be better than absolute accuracy. Note that if you are measuring completed assemblies over a range of frequencies, you likely won't have the option of picking an "odd number of 1/8 wavelengths," or any other particular number of degrees, for your measurement. Let's say your cables are 10 nanoseconds long (a couple meters). If you want to check the match from 1.6GHz to 1.7GHz, a rather narrow range, the cable length varies by 360 degrees. But that doesn't matter: for matching, it's the repeatability of the measurement that does matter. If you get to caring about absolute accuracy, check the accuracy specs of your instrument, and read ap notes... Have you checked for HP and/or Agilent and/or Rohde & Schwarz and/or Anritsu (and perhaps some others) ap notes? I know for sure that there are a lot of them from Agilent (which may have originally been written at HP, before Agilent split off). Since you are using an HP8753, give you local Agilent sales rep a call if you can't find the ap notes on the web, and ask her/him for applications information. Cheers, Tom |