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Ok here is my problem.
I would like to build an antenna for the S band. That is near 2500 MHz for those of us that are not knowing of the letter to frequency correlation. :-) The difficulty is in testing the antenna to make certain that it will accept antenna power and not cause the transmitter grief while it is doing it. I know that I can't go to Radio Shack and buy their SWR bridge to do this testing. I have a friend that could help me in the 1200 MHz range but he does not have a spectrum analyzer that will go to 2500 MHz. He suggested the possibility of taking a signal generator and feeding the antenna through a directional coupler. The return signal from the antenna would then be sent to the spectrum analyzer so that it could be monitored for a relative level and as the antenna was tuned closer to the proper impedance and the return loss went up the spectrum analyzer would read a lower and lower level. Unfortunately we lack a directional coupler and a spectrum analyzer for these frequencies. I just got an idea. We still need to come up with a directional coupler but if we can get a crystal detector that works up there we can monitor the relative power with an oscilloscope or a DVM. I have a few more people in the area that I can ask about the directional coupler. Does this look like a possible solution to anyone here? Or should I get a piece of waveguide suitable for this frequency and a crystal detector and calculate the VSWR by making the detector slide from one end of the waveguide to the other. I remember in tech school doing this at microwave frequencies to measure VSWR. Any suggestions or ideas will be investigated to make this work and will be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance. Al Butler ka0ies |
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