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Reg Edwards wrote:
All electrical calibration and testing laboratories issue tables of claimed accuracies of measurements. Measurement uncertainties stated on calibration certificates are legally binding. All stated measurement results must be traceable to International Standards or a laboratory or testing station loses its status. Consequently there is no incentive for a laboratory to overstate its capabilities in its sales literature. Indeed, it is dangerous, illegal even! Naturally, laboratories can differ widely, one from another. It would be interesting to compare laboratory uncertainties with performance figures claimed by antenna manufacturers. Or anyone else. Does anyone have typical examples of measurement uncertainties claimed by antenna testing stations? Answers in decibels please. A reply from a testing station, at HF or VHF, would be specially appreciated. There is no simple reply, Reg, but you're very welcome to come down and read three box-files full of references on this subject. It all depends what you're trying to measu simple forward gain or the complete directional radiation pattern; absolute or relative gain; and whether the antenna is a beam or something less directional. The kind of measurement that is subject to the least errors is a comparison of forward gain between two or more directional antennas that are very similar. The more similar the antennas under test (AUTs) are, the better the errors in each individual measurement will match and cancel out. The more directional the AUT is, the less its gain measurement will be affected by unwanted reflections. The largest source of error in this case is probably in the uniformity of field strength and phase across the test space where you will position the AUT. There is no single answer in dB for this: you would have to estimate the error-bars by modeling on a case-by-case basis. Amateur measurements, such as those made by VHF Groups in the USA, typically use a ground reflection range technique that creates a test volume at a height of about 6-10ft above ground, to make it easily accessible by standing on a picnic table and waving the antenna about by hand, but these practical needs will also increase the errors compared with a professional range with remote-controlled positioning and more time to do it properly. However, within their limitations, careful amateur measurements can make valid better/worse comparisons between very similar antennas. Reproducibility of gain measurements on the same yagi is within a few tenths of a dB... and the more similar your AUTs are, the closer you can approach this limit when comparing different antennas. Absolute gain measurement is an additional can of worms. The most common amateur mistake is to attempt to measure gain in dBd by comparing a long yagi against a reference dipole. BIG MISTAKE! A dipole is so non-directional, it makes the so-called "reference" measurement very vulnerable to stray reflections that a sharper beam just doesn't see, so any so-called "standard dipole" is in fact totally worthless. Or even worse than worthless, the "results" can be anything you want, wish or dream of. Amateur antenna literature is full of such examples, all fueled by over-active imagination. The solution is to use a reference antenna that is as directional as the AUTs, and to measure or compute its gain by some other means. For example, there is an IEEE standard gain reference antenna that has been designed to be both directional and reproducible (in the sense that its gain is quite tolerant of construction errors) and the gain of that antenna has been very carefully measured under the best possible lab conditions. For microwaves, the usual reference is a standard horn antenna whose gain can be both measured and computed. What amateur groups like Scott's tend to do is to keep a "gold standard" reference yagi that is used for all their own measurement meets - and above all, to put much more faith in the *relative* gain comparisons than in the claimed absolute gains. For HF antennas, the required physical size of the test range scales up with the wavelength, and all the problems about range reflections and non-directional of AUTs become impossible for professionals and amateurs alike. That means even professionals are thrown back to computer modeling... which amateurs can do equally well. -- 73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
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