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Thanks for responding, Gary.
Sweep time is something that I had not even been considering, so I appreciate the info. From what I can gather about the 7L12, the slowest sweep is 10 mSec/division, or 0.1 second for a complete sweep. That is the sweep setting Tek says to use for all frequency domain analyses, regardless of bandwidth. The other sweep settings go from 10 mSec/division to something like 1 uSec/division, but they are intended for time domain analyses. As a reality check on a 0.1 second sweep, I looked at HP's performance test procedure for the 8552B to see what sweeps they specify for measuring the 8552B's bandwidth. For the 300 Hz RBW, they list a 0.2 second sweep (I assume that's not 0.2 second/division). Not really too far from Tek's 0.1 second. Of course, at the narrower bandwidths, HP's specified sweeps get much slower, as you pointed out. And if it is 0.2 second/division, then there is a profound difference between the Tek and HP filter designs or I'm missing something big. As I recall, the slower sweeps are to avoid ringing in the filters, gaussian skirts notwithstanding. So maybe the 7L12 doesn't require a storage scope for the 300 Hz RBW? Sure wish I had access to the Tek Op manual for the 7L12. 73, Chuck Gary Schafer wrote: On Wed, 18 May 2005 19:04:44 -0400, chuck wrote: I'm in the market for a used spectrum analyzer like the 7L12 or the HP 141-T. One important use will be to make two-tone IMD measurements on HF SSB transmitters. I am concerned that with tone separations on the order of one kHz, the 7L12 may not have sufficient bandwidth in the 300 Hz mode to resolve adjacent IMD products expected to differ in amplitude by 40 dB or more. Has anyone on the group used a 7L12 for this purpose and is the 300 Hz RBW sufficiently narrow? There seems little doubt that the 141, with 10 Hz or 100 Hz RBW, will handle this. Many thanks in advance. Chuck NT3G I have never played with a 7L12 but do have a 141t. 300hz bandwidth will work. The best resolution on the 141t is 100hz. There is a 10 hz video filter but the video filter does no good for resolution. It only gets rid of noise. The biggest problem that I can imagine with the 7L12 would be whether or not your scope has some kind of storage or long persistency on the tube. To look at 300 hz bandwidth you need a very slow sweep speed on the scan. If there is no storage you will not be able to see it. 73 Gary K4FMX |
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