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#11
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#13
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On Sun, 01 Jan 2006 03:25:23 GMT, Owen Duffy wrote:
On Sat, 31 Dec 2005 18:14:04 -0800, dansawyeror wrote: why the tee as described, doesn't the 8405A have a tee probe? Dan, my reason for this question is that you do not seem to have a load independent sample of the forward wave (if you are referencing measurements to the A probe). Ideally you would use a dual directional coupler, otherwise, you need to isolate the A sample from load impedance variations and reflections using a largish attenuator for example. If you are working the ratios out entirely from the B probe, eg B probe measurements on s/c and unknown load, then the A measurement becomes unimportant. Note that while this approach can give you enough info to measure rho and calculate SWR, it will not permit phase measurements. This approach dumbs the instrument down to a single channel RF voltmeter. Owen -- |
#14
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The VVM appears to do a great job of reading 'open circuit' at 180 degrees and
50 Ohms at 0 degrees, however it does not appear to read shorts accurately. Shorts read at about 150 degrees instead of -180. They also degrade the incoming signal to the point where is has significant noise on the monitor output line. Is there a technique for doing this? Thanks - Dan This is the next chapter in the antenna measuring saga. Today's adventure is trying to measure SWR with an HP 8405A Vector Voltmeter. The measuring setup is a standard signal generator feeding a tee. One branch feeds the A input of the 8405A and the other a 20 db directional configured in reverse, that is feeding the out port. The assumption is the reflected signal will be read correctly on the in port. The in port is then terminated or connected to an antenna. It would also be nice it you had a 6 - 10 dB pad between the generator and the directional coupler (DC); located right at the DC. You want the source match to be set right there and the A probe to sample right there. An open termination reads 180 degrees and a 50 Ohm termination reads 0 degrees and 55 db down from the input. (I assume 20 of that is the coupler so I am subtracting 20 from that reading - is that a correct assumption.) No and no. Although an open isn't as bad a reference as some folks think (in coax anyway), a better reference is a short. Then you know that the reflection is 100% -180 deg. (Where "" means "angle of") An open has a bit of fringing capacitance and a tiny bit of radiation so it strays (sorry) from 100% 0 degrees. The other thing you need to do is normalize all future readings to 0 dB. Because, as Owen notes, you're throwing away phase information in your quest for SWR only data, then start thinking in terms of return loss. Return loss is measured (or calculated) against a 0 dB reference. So from the beginning, when you get a reading with a short (or open) that ratio becomes your 0 dB reference. Using the method to read the SWR on an antenna produces values very close to those from several SWR meters used as controls. When the output is terminated in 25 Ohms (2 x 50 Ohm terminators on a tee) the reflected signal reads about 24.5 db. (The B channel won't calibrate to within 1/2 a db so readings are estimates) Subtracting the 20 db bias yields 4.5 db. Within the error of the instrument this is pretty close to an SWR of 2:1. Are you saying that it you step the input power to the "B" channel by 1 dB, it measures a 1/2 dB change, or that with the same signal applied to A and B they only agree within 1/2 dB? If it's the former, then stop here and fix the instrument. If it's the latter, you don't care; you are measuring ratios. Is there an error in this logic? If the instrument is working well enough to perform this calculation then it should support more complicated measurements. There are errors someplace. A 2:1 SWR is a return loss of 9.55 dB. |
#15
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![]() In article , Wes Stewart wrote: The 8405A manual indicates the use of a power divider, and then a pair of equal-value pads. One side goes to the probe T for the A (reference) probe and thence to the termination, and the other goes to the probe T for the B probe and thence to the device-under-test. Actually, my manual does not show this. Although I have the full kit of a resistive tee, two 50 ohm "N" sampling tees and appropriate terminations, I don't believe Dan does. The manual is quite clear that the A and B probes need to be connected to points which are isolated from one another. I've read this someplace, but again my version of the manual (unless I'm really missing something) doesn't say it. The BAMA copy mentions it in paragraph 3-14. Later text indicates that attaching the two probes to a single point is an appropriate way to set phase-zero. Nevertheless, the directional coupler provides the isolation between probes. I see the issue, and I think I was conflating two different sorts of measurement regimes. The splitter/isolator/pad arrangement I was referring to appears on page 3-3 of the 8405A manual available at BAMA. It's what's appropriate for doing an in-line test of a transmission line or other network, where you want to see the effect of the network itself and can measure (via probe B) at the network's output. Page 3-4 shows a somewhat similar hookup, which doesn't include the resistive pads... I presume because the device-under-test (an amplifier) is assumed to have high isolation as part of its design. Neither of these hookups wouldn't work for measuring an antenna, since you can't measure at the antenna's output. Instead, using a directional coupler provides the necessary isolation, and (as you point out) lets you determine the incident and reflected signals accurately. I've got to clarify this a bit if I can... If you have the full set of parts per figure 11 in AN77-3 and you are using them as shown, then with equal loads on the two ends, the circuit is essentially a resistive Wheatstone bridge in balance with the null detected by the difference between probes A and B. In this case, the "incident" signal -is- measured by the A probe and the effects to the source by a changing load are incorporated into the measurement. In the case at hand, at least as I imagine it, there is no longer an nice tidy resistive Wheatstone bridge, but some cabling and a directional coupler in the mix. In this case, the generator is no longer the "source", the source is the signal at the input to the coupler. It is my belief (unless I change my mind later) that a sample derived from a resistive divider remote from the input to the directional coupler is not a true measure of the incident signal. Hmmm. In the general case, I believe you're correct. I suspect that the setup shown in the 8405A manual sets up a specific special case, though. The diagrams and text seem to be defining a case in which: - there is a physical and electrical symmetry in the T arrangement - that is, the power splitter is symmetrical, and the pair of attenuator pads between the splitter and the (A probe tap) and (device under test) are matched. The manual makes a point of this issue. - The pads being used are matched to the system's transmission line impedance, so that any reflected signal coming back from the DUT/coupler sees a proper termination by the source (the pad and signal generator, in this case) and is not re-reflected. In this particular situation, I believe that the incident signals reaching the DUT (the input to the coupler, in this case) and the "A" probe, would be identical... would they not? The proper termination of the reflected wave will mean that it won't re-reflect off of the generator and alter the incident wave. The "A" probe signal (off on its side of the "T") and a signal read out via the incident-wave tap on the directional coupler ought to be the same, once the coupling coefficient is taken into account... no? -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#16
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I do not have the 8405a adapter kit or power splitter. I made "probe to bnc"
adapters with 3/4 inch copper plumbing stock. The threads on the back of the probe are standard thread so it is easy to make an adapter and simply screw the probes in. This allows the A and B inputs to be connected to the directional coupler with bnc. The measuring setup is a signal generator feeding a tee. One side of the tee connects to the A channel input. The other side feeds the 'output side' of the coupler. The B port is connected to the coupled signal port. The load is connected to the coupler input. This should read the reflected signal. The signal generator is adjusted to read 0 dbm on the A port for all readings. (This is not possible for the 'shorted' readings). I do not have a pad between the generator and the tee. However, the above setup appears to support consistent readings. Dan Wes Stewart wrote: On Sun, 01 Jan 2006 19:15:12 -0000, (Dave Platt) wrote: In article , Wes Stewart wrote: The measuring setup is a standard signal generator feeding a tee. One branch feeds the A input of the 8405A and the other a 20 db directional configured in reverse, that is feeding the out port. The assumption is the reflected signal will be read correctly on the in port. The in port is then terminated or connected to an antenna. It would also be nice it you had a 6 - 10 dB pad between the generator and the directional coupler (DC); located right at the DC. You want the source match to be set right there and the A probe to sample right there. The 8405A manual indicates the use of a power divider, and then a pair of equal-value pads. One side goes to the probe T for the A (reference) probe and thence to the termination, and the other goes to the probe T for the B probe and thence to the device-under-test. Actually, my manual does not show this. Although I have the full kit of a resistive tee, two 50 ohm "N" sampling tees and appropriate terminations, I don't believe Dan does. The manual is quite clear that the A and B probes need to be connected to points which are isolated from one another. I've read this someplace, but again my version of the manual (unless I'm really missing something) doesn't say it. Nevertheless, the directional coupler provides the isolation between probes. You really don't want the oddities of the load connected to the B side to affect the voltage/phase of the reference signal seen by the "A" probe - it'd certainly wreck the measurement. Using a power divider, and resistive pads for isolation is one way to do this. Actually, you do want to measure (include) the effects of the load on the source. Although you ideally want the source to be unchangable with respect to changes in the load (good source match). That is the point of my suggestion to pad the source at the input to the coupler. (Just as does paragraph 2.3 of Owen's reference) But if the load -does- pull the source you damn sure want to know it and account for it. The desired ratio is that between the incident signal and the reflected signal. Sampling somewhere off in isolated space via a tee and additional padding does -not- yield the incident signal. Using a pad followed by a dual directional coupler (as in the experiment page to which Owen posted a link - thanks!) is another. My point exactly. With the dual coupler the forward coupled arm -is- measuring the incident signal -regardless- of what effects load pull have on the source output. |
#17
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Owen,
Yes, you are right. The single coupler doesn't isolate the channels. Putting a 10 dbm attenuator between the tee and the coupler changes the 50 Ohm reading. I think a dual directional coupler is required. I will have to put this on hold until that problem is solved. Thanks - Dan Owen Duffy wrote: On Sun, 01 Jan 2006 03:25:23 GMT, Owen Duffy wrote: On Sat, 31 Dec 2005 18:14:04 -0800, dansawyeror wrote: why the tee as described, doesn't the 8405A have a tee probe? Dan, my reason for this question is that you do not seem to have a load independent sample of the forward wave (if you are referencing measurements to the A probe). Ideally you would use a dual directional coupler, otherwise, you need to isolate the A sample from load impedance variations and reflections using a largish attenuator for example. If you are working the ratios out entirely from the B probe, eg B probe measurements on s/c and unknown load, then the A measurement becomes unimportant. Note that while this approach can give you enough info to measure rho and calculate SWR, it will not permit phase measurements. This approach dumbs the instrument down to a single channel RF voltmeter. Owen -- |
#18
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![]() "dansawyeror" wrote in message . .. Owen, Yes, you are right. The single coupler doesn't isolate the channels. Putting a 10 dbm attenuator between the tee and the coupler changes the 50 Ohm reading. I think a dual directional coupler is required. I will have to put this on hold until that problem is solved. Thanks - Dan Dan Are you open to trying to assemble something to measure the reflection coefficient rather than to put the project on hold? The HP 41952A Transmission/Reflection Test Set uses only one directional coupler. It uses a power splitter at the input with a pad to level the outputs from the "Fwd" and "Rev" ports. I can scan some info from the HP 41952 and E-mail them to you if you have interest in building something. I would think it would be fairly easy to build devices for HF if you already have a decent directional coupler. Jerry |
#19
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Jerry,
Thanks, the antenna handbook has a design for a bi-directional coupler that looks like it will work. At this point I think the next step is to separate the input to the A port from the reflected signal. Putting a pad in the circuit to increase isolation affected the reflected reading. I am also sorting through those readings. Dan Jerry Martes wrote: "dansawyeror" wrote in message . .. Owen, Yes, you are right. The single coupler doesn't isolate the channels. Putting a 10 dbm attenuator between the tee and the coupler changes the 50 Ohm reading. I think a dual directional coupler is required. I will have to put this on hold until that problem is solved. Thanks - Dan Dan Are you open to trying to assemble something to measure the reflection coefficient rather than to put the project on hold? The HP 41952A Transmission/Reflection Test Set uses only one directional coupler. It uses a power splitter at the input with a pad to level the outputs from the "Fwd" and "Rev" ports. I can scan some info from the HP 41952 and E-mail them to you if you have interest in building something. I would think it would be fairly easy to build devices for HF if you already have a decent directional coupler. Jerry |
#20
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