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Old December 29th 05, 12:24 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Owen Duffy
 
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Default coaxpair reflection coeff angle is 'zero'

On Wed, 28 Dec 2005 08:00:51 -0800, dansawyeror
wrote:


After making an error here between the effects of odd versus even quarter waves
at the source I am getting closer to being able to measure the impedance of a
loaded vertical 'in the shack'. At the moment this is limited to a single
frequency 'close' to a frequency of interest. But even that is a triumph.


Is that as hard as it looks?

Take an example:

You have an impedance meter to measure complex impedance at the
frequency of interest, being 3.6MHz for the sake of the example.

(This technique depends on the behaviour of the tranmission lines, you
would want to be sure that the transmission lines are in good
condition and work as characterised.)

You measure the impedance 40-j15 for example looking into a cascade of
5m of RG58 and 50m of 9913 connected to the unknown load.

The Z at the load end of the RG58 is 60.42-j20.13. That is the Z
looking into the 9913.

The Z at the load end of the 9913 is 41.94+j18.03.

Is this the kind of thing you are trying to do?

Bear in mind that you cannot know the characteristics of the lines etc
to support the precision shown above. You also need to keep in mind
the sensitivity of the results to changes in parameters to form a view
of the confidence limits of your measurements.

This took more time to write about than it did to find the results.

Owen
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Old December 29th 05, 05:37 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
dansawyeror
 
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Default coaxpair reflection coeff angle is 'zero'

Owen,

Thanks for the example. I do not have an impedance meter. I do have a vector
voltmeter that will read the phase and value of the reflected signal.

The core problem is: How to measure and improve the performance of a loaded
vertical. The unknowns are the value of ground and antenna resonance.

Setting the coax to a 1/4 wave multiple was a way to remove its phase altering
characteristics from the reflected signal at a frequency of interest. That seems
to be working and is predictable to measure the 1/4 wave odd, open circuit,
resonant points, etc. This simply proves consistent measurement and correct
identification of the electrical cable length.

I am pretty confident about the coax measurements at this time. Now on the to
antenna. I am not what the reflected angle is from the antenna. The coaxpair
program predicts it can vary 180 degrees for a purely resistive load.

Thanks for your help - Dan



Owen Duffy wrote:
On Wed, 28 Dec 2005 08:00:51 -0800, dansawyeror
wrote:



After making an error here between the effects of odd versus even quarter waves
at the source I am getting closer to being able to measure the impedance of a
loaded vertical 'in the shack'. At the moment this is limited to a single
frequency 'close' to a frequency of interest. But even that is a triumph.



Is that as hard as it looks?

Take an example:

You have an impedance meter to measure complex impedance at the
frequency of interest, being 3.6MHz for the sake of the example.

(This technique depends on the behaviour of the tranmission lines, you
would want to be sure that the transmission lines are in good
condition and work as characterised.)

You measure the impedance 40-j15 for example looking into a cascade of
5m of RG58 and 50m of 9913 connected to the unknown load.

The Z at the load end of the RG58 is 60.42-j20.13. That is the Z
looking into the 9913.

The Z at the load end of the 9913 is 41.94+j18.03.

Is this the kind of thing you are trying to do?

Bear in mind that you cannot know the characteristics of the lines etc
to support the precision shown above. You also need to keep in mind
the sensitivity of the results to changes in parameters to form a view
of the confidence limits of your measurements.

This took more time to write about than it did to find the results.

Owen
--

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Old December 29th 05, 06:20 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Owen Duffy
 
Posts: n/a
Default coaxpair reflection coeff angle is 'zero'

On Wed, 28 Dec 2005 21:37:05 -0800, dansawyeror
wrote:

Owen,

Thanks for the example. I do not have an impedance meter. I do have a vector
voltmeter that will read the phase and value of the reflected signal.


If you mean relative to the forward wave, then you can calculate Z
from that.


The core problem is: How to measure and improve the performance of a loaded
vertical. The unknowns are the value of ground and antenna resonance.

Setting the coax to a 1/4 wave multiple was a way to remove its phase altering
characteristics from the reflected signal at a frequency of interest. That seems
to be working and is predictable to measure the 1/4 wave odd, open circuit,
resonant points, etc. This simply proves consistent measurement and correct
identification of the electrical cable length.


I don't know that that is necessary or helpful.


I am pretty confident about the coax measurements at this time. Now on the to
antenna. I am not what the reflected angle is from the antenna. The coaxpair
program predicts it can vary 180 degrees for a purely resistive load.


Yes, the complex reflection coefficients for a 51+j0 ohm load and
49+j0 ohm load are both very small magnitude, and 180 deg different in
phase.

Don't worry about the reflection coefficient at the antenna, find what
it is at the instrument interface, calculate the Z, and use one of the
many calculators to work out what it is at the end of the line (they
use the input reflection coefficient and propagation constant to do
that, but they do it internally).

You know that Gamma=(Zl-Zo)/(Zl+Zo), rearrange the terms to find Zl
knowing Zo and Gamma, measure Gamma with your instrument, calculate
Zl... and the rest is easy.

Back to my worked example, if you instrument indicated Gamma was 0.195
-117 in 50ohms, you would calculate Z to be 40-j15... and go from
there.

What more do you need?

Owen

Thanks for your help - Dan



Owen Duffy wrote:
On Wed, 28 Dec 2005 08:00:51 -0800, dansawyeror
wrote:



After making an error here between the effects of odd versus even quarter waves
at the source I am getting closer to being able to measure the impedance of a
loaded vertical 'in the shack'. At the moment this is limited to a single
frequency 'close' to a frequency of interest. But even that is a triumph.



Is that as hard as it looks?

Take an example:

You have an impedance meter to measure complex impedance at the
frequency of interest, being 3.6MHz for the sake of the example.

(This technique depends on the behaviour of the tranmission lines, you
would want to be sure that the transmission lines are in good
condition and work as characterised.)

You measure the impedance 40-j15 for example looking into a cascade of
5m of RG58 and 50m of 9913 connected to the unknown load.

The Z at the load end of the RG58 is 60.42-j20.13. That is the Z
looking into the 9913.

The Z at the load end of the 9913 is 41.94+j18.03.

Is this the kind of thing you are trying to do?

Bear in mind that you cannot know the characteristics of the lines etc
to support the precision shown above. You also need to keep in mind
the sensitivity of the results to changes in parameters to form a view
of the confidence limits of your measurements.

This took more time to write about than it did to find the results.

Owen
--

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Old December 29th 05, 07:13 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Owen Duffy
 
Posts: n/a
Default coaxpair reflection coeff angle is 'zero'

On Thu, 29 Dec 2005 06:20:38 GMT, Owen Duffy wrote:


You know that Gamma=(Zl-Zo)/(Zl+Zo), rearrange the terms to find Zl
knowing Zo and Gamma, measure Gamma with your instrument, calculate
Zl... and the rest is easy.


For avoidance of doubt, the Zl above is the z at the instrument
interface. 'The rest is easy' is the process of working out Z at the
antenna knowning z at the source end of a known transmission line.

Back to my worked example, if you instrument indicated Gamma was 0.195
-117 in 50ohms, you would calculate Z to be 40-j15... and go from
there.


Meaning the rest of my example which led to a antenna z of
41.94+j18.03


What more do you need?

Owen


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Old December 29th 05, 07:53 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Wes Stewart
 
Posts: n/a
Default coaxpair reflection coeff angle is 'zero'

On Wed, 28 Dec 2005 21:37:05 -0800, dansawyeror
wrote:

Owen,

Thanks for the example. I do not have an impedance meter. I do have a vector
voltmeter that will read the phase and value of the reflected signal.

The core problem is: How to measure and improve the performance of a loaded
vertical. The unknowns are the value of ground and antenna resonance.

Setting the coax to a 1/4 wave multiple was a way to remove its phase altering
characteristics from the reflected signal at a frequency of interest. That seems
to be working and is predictable to measure the 1/4 wave odd, open circuit,
resonant points, etc. This simply proves consistent measurement and correct
identification of the electrical cable length.


You're making this way too complex (pun intended).. Why not just
connect the coax to the bridge and put your open-short-load standards
on the far end and do the calibration?

Or move the instrument out in the field?

For example:

http://users.triconet.org/wesandlinda/Field_8405_a.jpg





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Old December 29th 05, 10:15 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Owen Duffy
 
Posts: n/a
Default coaxpair reflection coeff angle is 'zero'

On Thu, 29 Dec 2005 00:53:44 -0700, Wes Stewart
wrote:


You're making this way too complex (pun intended).. Why not just
connect the coax to the bridge and put your open-short-load standards
on the far end and do the calibration?

Or move the instrument out in the field?


Wes, I have been guessing that Dan wants to measure the antenna over a
band of frequencies, and doesn't want to be popping up to the
feedpoint for every frequency cal.

No doubt, the process you propose Wes is simpler and more accurate, if
it is physically convenient.

Would calibration against a single s/c standard be accurate enough for
the purpose at hand. Perhaps a coax relay at the antenna feedpoint to
switch between a s/c port and the real load might be accurate enough
for calibration, and a whole lot more convenient. IIRC there is only
around 0.4dB of line loss from the shack (ie the desired VVM location)
to the feedpoint.

Dan, I think you have gotten on a sidetrack about building the
transmission line out to a tuned length. It is not necessary, or even
desirable as far as I can see, but it has the downside of complicating
the calcs and increasing scope for errors when you build out with a
different line type.

Owen
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Old December 29th 05, 04:34 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Jerry Martes
 
Posts: n/a
Default coaxpair reflection coeff angle is 'zero'


"Owen Duffy" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 29 Dec 2005 00:53:44 -0700, Wes Stewart
wrote:


You're making this way too complex (pun intended).. Why not just
connect the coax to the bridge and put your open-short-load standards
on the far end and do the calibration?

Or move the instrument out in the field?


Wes, I have been guessing that Dan wants to measure the antenna over a
band of frequencies, and doesn't want to be popping up to the
feedpoint for every frequency cal.

No doubt, the process you propose Wes is simpler and more accurate, if
it is physically convenient.

Would calibration against a single s/c standard be accurate enough for
the purpose at hand. Perhaps a coax relay at the antenna feedpoint to
switch between a s/c port and the real load might be accurate enough
for calibration, and a whole lot more convenient. IIRC there is only
around 0.4dB of line loss from the shack (ie the desired VVM location)
to the feedpoint.

Dan, I think you have gotten on a sidetrack about building the
transmission line out to a tuned length. It is not necessary, or even
desirable as far as I can see, but it has the downside of complicating
the calcs and increasing scope for errors when you build out with a
different line type.

Owen


Wes, and Owen, This problem of how to resolve the terminating impedance
seems so simple that I realize that I (again) must be missing something.
Wouldnt it be accurate enough for Dan to record the impedance at his coupler
for two conditions, 1) short circuit at the antenna end of the coax, and 2)
the antenna connected. Plot both impedances on a Smith Chart. Since the
impedance associated with the short is known to be zero, he needs only to
rotate *both* impedances thru the same angle needed to place the short ckt
impedance at zero on the smith Chart.

Jerry


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Old December 29th 05, 07:13 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Wes Stewart
 
Posts: n/a
Default coaxpair reflection coeff angle is 'zero'

On Thu, 29 Dec 2005 10:15:50 GMT, Owen Duffy wrote:

On Thu, 29 Dec 2005 00:53:44 -0700, Wes Stewart
wrote:


You're making this way too complex (pun intended).. Why not just
connect the coax to the bridge and put your open-short-load standards
on the far end and do the calibration?

Or move the instrument out in the field?


Wes, I have been guessing that Dan wants to measure the antenna over a
band of frequencies, and doesn't want to be popping up to the
feedpoint for every frequency cal.


I've provided a spreadsheet that facilitates the calculations over a
range of frequencies.

www.qsl.net/n7ws/8405.zip

So a couple of trips to the end of the cable are all that are required
to calibrate the setup.

(I must confess, I haven't tried this program with a line much over a
few inches in length to determine whether my calibration functions can
handle it, but I think so.)

Without doubt, the chance of errors creeping in using a long cable is
increased, but the alternative of trying to "calibrate" a cable and
subtract its effects mathematically is equally suspect. In fact, the
one-step process is pretty much the same thing; the cable is being
characterized by the calibration process.




No doubt, the process you propose Wes is simpler and more accurate, if
it is physically convenient.

Would calibration against a single s/c standard be accurate enough for
the purpose at hand. Perhaps a coax relay at the antenna feedpoint to
switch between a s/c port and the real load might be accurate enough
for calibration, and a whole lot more convenient. IIRC there is only
around 0.4dB of line loss from the shack (ie the desired VVM location)
to the feedpoint.

Dan, I think you have gotten on a sidetrack about building the
transmission line out to a tuned length. It is not necessary, or even
desirable as far as I can see, but it has the downside of complicating
the calcs and increasing scope for errors when you build out with a
different line type.

Owen


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Old December 29th 05, 11:40 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Owen Duffy
 
Posts: n/a
Default coaxpair reflection coeff angle is 'zero'

On Thu, 29 Dec 2005 12:13:17 -0700, Wes Stewart
wrote:


I've provided a spreadsheet that facilitates the calculations over a
range of frequencies.

www.qsl.net/n7ws/8405.zip

So a couple of trips to the end of the cable are all that are required
to calibrate the setup.

(I must confess, I haven't tried this program with a line much over a
few inches in length to determine whether my calibration functions can
handle it, but I think so.)


That's a good idea!

Wes, does it collect enough information to be able to correctly
calculate a phase constant on longer feedline. Some work for the next
version perhaps?

Owen

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Old December 30th 05, 01:50 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Roy Lewallen
 
Posts: n/a
Default coaxpair reflection coeff angle is 'zero'

Owen Duffy wrote:
On Thu, 29 Dec 2005 12:13:17 -0700, Wes Stewart
wrote:



I've provided a spreadsheet that facilitates the calculations over a
range of frequencies.

www.qsl.net/n7ws/8405.zip

So a couple of trips to the end of the cable are all that are required
to calibrate the setup.

(I must confess, I haven't tried this program with a line much over a
few inches in length to determine whether my calibration functions can
handle it, but I think so.)



That's a good idea!

Wes, does it collect enough information to be able to correctly
calculate a phase constant on longer feedline. Some work for the next
version perhaps?


A potential problem is cable loss. When the line Z0 is close to the
impedance being measured, loss doesn't have much effect. But if the two
impedances are very different, a surprisingly small amount of loss can
have a significant effect on the observed input impedance.

Of course, the short circuit measurement will give you the cable loss,
which can then be used in the calibration process. It's just that you
wouldn't be able to do the correction by the simple equivalent of a
Smith chart rotation.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL


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