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#1
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I would like to know if the follow technique will work to measure resonance of
an antenna. I know have a working HP 8405a. It has been a struggle to repair it and to align it, however it now appears to be working. My plan is to connect a bi-directional coupler to the 8405a. The coupler will be terminated in a 50 Ohm terminator. The phase will be read for this configuration. The next step is to replace the 50 Ohm terminator with a direct connection to an unknown antenna. I will then change the frequency until the phase angle matchs the 50 Ohm phase angle. Does this make sense? What are the draw backs? How close will this method get compared to a noise bridge? Thanks - Dan kb0qil |
#2
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I would like to know if the follow technique will work to measure resonance
of an antenna. I know have a working HP 8405a. It has been a struggle to repair it and to align it, however it now appears to be working. My plan is to connect a bi-directional coupler to the 8405a. The coupler will be terminated in a 50 Ohm terminator. The phase will be read for this configuration. The next step is to replace the 50 Ohm terminator with a direct connection to an unknown antenna. I will then change the frequency until the phase angle matchs the 50 Ohm phase angle. Does this make sense? What are the draw backs? How close will this method get compared to a noise bridge? Thanks - Dan kb0qil Dan, the phase angle of the reflection coefficient of a matched load is unimportant, and is likely to be anything. Specifically; if it is a dot on the Smith Chart center -- who cares? Typically the return loss of a good quality load could well be 40dB. Again, if you are measuring beyond the frequency range of the coupler you must determine its directivity. It is very likely that you are reading the phase of poor directivity and not the 50 ohm load. Also if you are using the 8405A, do you have all the accessories? In particular the BNC ( + 50 ohm thru) probe attachments which should be connected directly to your coupler ports. If you require N - BNC adapters to connect to the coupler, then as long as you have the same structures on each port, any phase error will be cancelled out. It is also good practice to attach a high quality 20 dB pad to the input of the coupler (thus ensuring your source return loss approaches 40 dB) -- you cannot always be certain that your source, plus coax, provides a good match. Note if the unit cannot lock with the 20 dB pad, then at least use a 10 dB pad. Another test is to connect both probes to the same source via a BNC "T" adapter. Do you show zero phase error? Interesting you have an 8405A, it is many years since I used one. I see them priced from $250.00 to a fully refurbished unit from Tucker (www.tucker.com) for $2,500.00. Regards, Frank |
#3
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On Mon, 05 Dec 2005 21:18:33 -0800, dansawyeror
wrote: I would like to know if the follow technique will work to measure resonance of an antenna. I know have a working HP 8405a. It has been a struggle to repair it and to align it, however it now appears to be working. My plan is to connect a bi-directional coupler to the 8405a. The coupler will be terminated in a 50 Ohm terminator. The phase will be read for this configuration. The next step is to replace the 50 Ohm terminator with a direct connection to an unknown antenna. I will then change the frequency until the phase angle matchs the 50 Ohm phase angle. Does this make sense? Sort of, but not exactly. As I described in another thread, the pitfall is the fact that the phase lengths of the coupler are different. You could set the phase offset to zero at frequency X but when you change to frequency Y, there is a built-in error. The correction for this is to use a line stretcher that (more-or-less) equalizes the phase lengths with respect to frequency. What are the draw backs? See above. How close will this method get compared to a noise bridge? With a little care you can make measurements that leave noise bridge measurements in the dust... not even close. With -lots- of care, you can approach network analyzer accuracy... more than is needed for practical antenna measurements. You need to see H-P App note AN77-3. When I get time---and with my dial-up connection---I mean lots of time, I will try to post a 13 MByte .pdf on qsl.net, if that's working. |
#4
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On Tue, 06 Dec 2005 07:45:36 -0700, Wes Stewart
wrote: On Mon, 05 Dec 2005 21:18:33 -0800, dansawyeror wrote: I would like to know if the follow technique will work to measure resonance of an antenna. I know have a working HP 8405a. It has been a struggle to repair it and to align it, however it now appears to be working. My plan is to connect a bi-directional coupler to the 8405a. The coupler will be terminated in a 50 Ohm terminator. The phase will be read for this configuration. The next step is to replace the 50 Ohm terminator with a direct connection to an unknown antenna. I will then change the frequency until the phase angle matchs the 50 Ohm phase angle. Does this make sense? Sort of, but not exactly. As I described in another thread, the pitfall is the fact that the phase lengths of the coupler are different. You could set the phase offset to zero at frequency X but when you change to frequency Y, there is a built-in error. I should have added that you don't do this with a 50 ohm load, but a short circuit instead. You want a big reflection with a known phase for a calibration standard. |
#5
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Sort of, but not exactly. As I described in another thread, the
pitfall is the fact that the phase lengths of the coupler are different. You could set the phase offset to zero at frequency X but when you change to frequency Y, there is a built-in error. I should have added that you don't do this with a 50 ohm load, but a short circuit instead. You want a big reflection with a known phase for a calibration standard. The first step is to establish the accuracy of the test equipment. A short/open at the output port of the directional coupler should produce a frequency independant phase shift between the forward and reverse coupled port. If you are not getting 180/0 deg, then there is something fundamentally wrong with the test set up. Connecting both probes of the 8405A to the same source should establish if any errors exist in the vector voltmeter. Using the BNC/probe adapters is essential to maintain repeatability in your measurements. Reference HP's 778D coupler at http://cp.literature.agilent.com/lit.../5952-8133.pdf : " Impedance Measurements The 778D is also well suited for measurements of impedance when used with the Agilent 8405A vector voltmeter. The technique is described in Application Note 77-3, Measurement of Complex Impedance, available at your nearest Agilent sales office. Again, a reflectometry technique is used. With the vector voltmeter, however, both magnitude and phase angle of the reflection coefficient can be measured. This setup is shown in Figure 3. Data can be read from the two meters of the vector voltmeter and transferred directly to a Smith Chart to provide impedance of such devices as antennas or other passive components. "It is many years since I have seen AN77-3, but I seem unable to find a copy on the web. Frank |
#6
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On Tue, 06 Dec 2005 16:48:32 GMT, "Frank"
wrote: Sort of, but not exactly. As I described in another thread, the pitfall is the fact that the phase lengths of the coupler are different. You could set the phase offset to zero at frequency X but when you change to frequency Y, there is a built-in error. I should have added that you don't do this with a 50 ohm load, but a short circuit instead. You want a big reflection with a known phase for a calibration standard. The first step is to establish the accuracy of the test equipment. A short/open at the output port of the directional coupler should produce a frequency independant phase shift between the forward and reverse coupled port. Maybe I misunderstand, but what you seem to be saying is that if I put Probe A at point X on a transmission line and Probe B at point X+Y (Y0), the phase difference with respect to frequency will not change. The directional coupler is no different, it is sampling the main line at two physically different locations. If you are not getting 180/0 deg, then there is something fundamentally wrong with the test set up. Connecting both probes of the 8405A to the same source should establish if any errors exist in the vector voltmeter. Using the BNC/probe adapters is essential to maintain repeatability in your measurements. Reference HP's 778D coupler at http://cp.literature.agilent.com/lit.../5952-8133.pdf : " Impedance Measurements The 778D is also well suited for measurements of impedance when used with the Agilent 8405A vector voltmeter. The technique is described in Application Note 77-3, Measurement of Complex Impedance, available at your nearest Agilent sales office. Again, a reflectometry technique is used. With the vector voltmeter, however, both magnitude and phase angle of the reflection coefficient can be measured. This setup is shown in Figure 3. Data can be read from the two meters of the vector voltmeter and transferred directly to a Smith Chart to provide impedance of such devices as antennas or other passive components. "It is many years since I have seen AN77-3, but I seem unable to find a copy on the web. Frank The pertinent pages are he http://www.qsl.net/n7ws/Pages%20from%20AN77-3.pdf |
#7
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On Tue, 06 Dec 2005 11:37:04 -0700, Wes Stewart
wrote: Maybe I misunderstand, but what you seem to be saying is that if I put Probe A at point X on a transmission line and Probe B at point X+Y (Y0), the phase difference with respect to frequency will not change. The directional coupler is no different, it is sampling the main line at two physically different locations. With respect, I think you two guys are talking about different kinds of couplers. Wes, your earlier description makes is clear that samples in the coupler you described are located at equidistant from their nearest ends, but not in the centre, so at different positions in the coupler. I think the coupled lines type of coupler for lower frequency use might fit this category. Frank assumes a coupler where the samples for both ports are taken at the same physical location on the main line. I think a crossed waveguide coupler might fit this category (depending on the way the coupling holes are implemented). Owen -- |
#8
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Wes,
The file reports an error. Can you load it? Thanks very much. Dan Wes Stewart wrote: On Tue, 06 Dec 2005 16:48:32 GMT, "Frank" wrote: Sort of, but not exactly. As I described in another thread, the pitfall is the fact that the phase lengths of the coupler are different. You could set the phase offset to zero at frequency X but when you change to frequency Y, there is a built-in error. I should have added that you don't do this with a 50 ohm load, but a short circuit instead. You want a big reflection with a known phase for a calibration standard. The first step is to establish the accuracy of the test equipment. A short/open at the output port of the directional coupler should produce a frequency independant phase shift between the forward and reverse coupled port. Maybe I misunderstand, but what you seem to be saying is that if I put Probe A at point X on a transmission line and Probe B at point X+Y (Y0), the phase difference with respect to frequency will not change. The directional coupler is no different, it is sampling the main line at two physically different locations. If you are not getting 180/0 deg, then there is something fundamentally wrong with the test set up. Connecting both probes of the 8405A to the same source should establish if any errors exist in the vector voltmeter. Using the BNC/probe adapters is essential to maintain repeatability in your measurements. Reference HP's 778D coupler at http://cp.literature.agilent.com/lit.../5952-8133.pdf : " Impedance Measurements The 778D is also well suited for measurements of impedance when used with the Agilent 8405A vector voltmeter. The technique is described in Application Note 77-3, Measurement of Complex Impedance, available at your nearest Agilent sales office. Again, a reflectometry technique is used. With the vector voltmeter, however, both magnitude and phase angle of the reflection coefficient can be measured. This setup is shown in Figure 3. Data can be read from the two meters of the vector voltmeter and transferred directly to a Smith Chart to provide impedance of such devices as antennas or other passive components. "It is many years since I have seen AN77-3, but I seem unable to find a copy on the web. Frank The pertinent pages are he http://www.qsl.net/n7ws/Pages%20from%20AN77-3.pdf |
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