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On Sat, 03 Sep 2011 09:25:31 -0700, Jeff Liebermann
wrote: I have a 4" pigtail around the ground lug and a male banana plug on the end that lives in the middle of the SO-239, unless I am making measurements. I use the banana plug as a shorting stick to neutralize any residual capacitive charge in the device/coaxial cable under test. Center conductor to cable ground. If I am especially concerned I'll groung the 259B to my extensive safety ground system. When dealing with little diodes you always want to make sure none of the sparks go through them. Ground, ground and ground. Hmmm.... The problem might be the SO-239 connector. When you plug something into that connector, it connects the center pin first, and then the ground. If it were replaced by an N connector, the ground would make contact before the center pink, thus offering some added protection. I'll see if the connector can be replaced. http://www.w8ji.com/mfj-259b_calibration.htm Most Likely Failures Other than manufacturing errors, the detector diodes clearly stand out as the most common problem. They are the most easily damaged devices in the analyzer. If you have a sudden problem, it is most likely a defective detector diode. Diode damage almost always comes from accidentally applying voltage on the antenna port. Why are the diodes so sensitive? In order for the detectors to be accurate within a fraction of a percent (one bit), detector diodes must have very low capacitance and a very low threshold voltage. This means the diodes, through necessity, must be low-power zero-bias Schottky microwave detector diodes. The same characteristics that make them accurate and linear cause the diodes to be especially sensitive to damage from small voltage spikes. ALWAYS discharge large antennas before connecting them to the analyzer! Never apply external voltages greater than 3 volts to the antenna port! and Because the detector is broadband and because it is dc coupled to the antenna, any external voltage across the input port causes measurement errors. It is the accumulated voltage of multiple sources that is most important, not the strength of any individual signal. Because of that, large antennas should be tested at times when propagated signals in the range of the antenna's response are at minimum strength. W8JI designed the MFJ-259b. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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