Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wow -- well written Ian
-- Caveat Lector (Reader Beware) Help The New Hams Someone Helped You Or did You Forget That ? "Ian Jackson" wrote in message ... In message .com, Jason writes But why we can add or minus gain and IP3 which are in different unit(db and dbm)? Anyone knows? Thank you rgds Jason Think of it this way: dBm indicates an absolute value. db indicates a relative value. For example: 0dBm = 1mW 0dBm + 3dB = 1mW x 2 = 2mW = 3dBm 0dBm + 10dB = 1mW x 10 = 10mW = 10dBm 3dBm + 10dB = 2mW x 10 = 20mW = 13dBm 20dBm - 30dB = 100mW/1000 = 0.1mW = -10dBm What you can't do is to add dBm values directly. If you have power combiner, and add 10dBm and 13dBm, you can't add 10dBm and 13dBm and get 23dBm. 23dBm would be 200mW (because 20dB is x 100, 3dB is x 2, so 100 x 2 =200), and this is incorrect. What you have to do is to convert the dBm values into mW, then add the mW. 10dBm = 10mW 13dBm = 20mW Total power = 30mW (and not 200mW) 30mW can then be converted back into dBm (= appx 14.5dBm) Do you see the pattern? Ian. -- |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message MF9Nd.29160$xt.24350@fed1read07, Caveat Lector
writes Wow -- well written Ian After over 40 years in Cable TV, I think I am beginning to get the hang of it! Ian ; )) -- |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|