Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old October 5th 03, 01:10 AM
Peter
 
Posts: n/a
Default Antenna Range Testing.

Hi all.

This may seem like a fairly basic question. But here we go!

I want to performance test a 436MHz high gain antenna. My plan is to
construct a simple dipole with a 1:1 balun for 436MHz as a reference antenna
and construct another dipole with a 1:1 balun to receive the test signal,
measure it with a diode detector and a milli-amp meter (field strength
meter) at the shack. Do the calculation and have the antenna gain.
This seems to me to be fairly straight forward, but has anyone carried out
similar measurements and concur with the approach or are there are there
traps and pit falls that I need to be aware of. Or is their simply a better
way?


Cheers

--
Peter Miles VK3YSF
Melbourne, Australia




  #2   Report Post  
Old October 5th 03, 03:31 AM
Ralph Mowery
 
Posts: n/a
Default


This may seem like a fairly basic question. But here we go!

I want to performance test a 436MHz high gain antenna. My plan is to
construct a simple dipole with a 1:1 balun for 436MHz as a reference

antenna
and construct another dipole with a 1:1 balun to receive the test signal,
measure it with a diode detector and a milli-amp meter (field strength
meter) at the shack. Do the calculation and have the antenna gain.
This seems to me to be fairly straight forward, but has anyone carried out
similar measurements and concur with the approach or are there are there
traps and pit falls that I need to be aware of. Or is their simply a

better
way?

You may want to use a small directional antenna on both ends. The ARRL
handbook gives a standard refferance gain antenna that you can use on the
end that you are going to replace with the antenna you are building. The
antenna is suspose to have a certain ammount of gain if constructed
exectally as given.
The directiona antennas will help eliminate some reflections. Also make
sure they are far enough apart to be out of the near field.


  #3   Report Post  
Old October 5th 03, 03:31 AM
Ralph Mowery
 
Posts: n/a
Default


This may seem like a fairly basic question. But here we go!

I want to performance test a 436MHz high gain antenna. My plan is to
construct a simple dipole with a 1:1 balun for 436MHz as a reference

antenna
and construct another dipole with a 1:1 balun to receive the test signal,
measure it with a diode detector and a milli-amp meter (field strength
meter) at the shack. Do the calculation and have the antenna gain.
This seems to me to be fairly straight forward, but has anyone carried out
similar measurements and concur with the approach or are there are there
traps and pit falls that I need to be aware of. Or is their simply a

better
way?

You may want to use a small directional antenna on both ends. The ARRL
handbook gives a standard refferance gain antenna that you can use on the
end that you are going to replace with the antenna you are building. The
antenna is suspose to have a certain ammount of gain if constructed
exectally as given.
The directiona antennas will help eliminate some reflections. Also make
sure they are far enough apart to be out of the near field.


  #4   Report Post  
Old October 5th 03, 04:03 AM
**THE-RFI-EMI-GUY**
 
Posts: n/a
Default

We just made a range dipole for 900 MHz. The balun we ordered from
Minicircuits (pay careful attention to pinouts) was a 1:1. It resonated
well once we took into account that the polyethelene mounting block
imparted a velocity factor which shortened the rods slightly.


Peter wrote:

Hi all.

This may seem like a fairly basic question. But here we go!

I want to performance test a 436MHz high gain antenna. My plan is to
construct a simple dipole with a 1:1 balun for 436MHz as a reference antenna
and construct another dipole with a 1:1 balun to receive the test signal,
measure it with a diode detector and a milli-amp meter (field strength
meter) at the shack. Do the calculation and have the antenna gain.
This seems to me to be fairly straight forward, but has anyone carried out
similar measurements and concur with the approach or are there are there
traps and pit falls that I need to be aware of. Or is their simply a better
way?


Cheers

--
Peter Miles VK3YSF
Melbourne, Australia








--
Joe Leikhim K4SAT


"Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny." -F.Z.

  #5   Report Post  
Old October 5th 03, 04:03 AM
**THE-RFI-EMI-GUY**
 
Posts: n/a
Default

We just made a range dipole for 900 MHz. The balun we ordered from
Minicircuits (pay careful attention to pinouts) was a 1:1. It resonated
well once we took into account that the polyethelene mounting block
imparted a velocity factor which shortened the rods slightly.


Peter wrote:

Hi all.

This may seem like a fairly basic question. But here we go!

I want to performance test a 436MHz high gain antenna. My plan is to
construct a simple dipole with a 1:1 balun for 436MHz as a reference antenna
and construct another dipole with a 1:1 balun to receive the test signal,
measure it with a diode detector and a milli-amp meter (field strength
meter) at the shack. Do the calculation and have the antenna gain.
This seems to me to be fairly straight forward, but has anyone carried out
similar measurements and concur with the approach or are there are there
traps and pit falls that I need to be aware of. Or is their simply a better
way?


Cheers

--
Peter Miles VK3YSF
Melbourne, Australia








--
Joe Leikhim K4SAT


"Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny." -F.Z.



  #6   Report Post  
Old October 5th 03, 08:40 AM
Brian Howie
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In message , Peter
writes
Hi all.

This may seem like a fairly basic question. But here we go!

I want to performance test a 436MHz high gain antenna. My plan is to
construct a simple dipole with a 1:1 balun for 436MHz as a reference antenna
and construct another dipole with a 1:1 balun to receive the test signal,
measure it with a diode detector and a milli-amp meter (field strength
meter) at the shack. Do the calculation and have the antenna gain.
This seems to me to be fairly straight forward, but has anyone carried out
similar measurements and concur with the approach or are there are there
traps and pit falls that I need to be aware of. Or is their simply a better
way?


I've done it on 1296MHz in a similar way. However I borrowed a
calibrated step attenuator and took the difference in readings between
the reference dipole and the antenna under test as the gain for the same
detector reading to avoid nonlinearities. You can also measure antenna
gain using sun noise on 70cm, but that's a bit trickier.

Brian GM4DIJ


--
Brian Howie
  #7   Report Post  
Old October 5th 03, 08:40 AM
Brian Howie
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In message , Peter
writes
Hi all.

This may seem like a fairly basic question. But here we go!

I want to performance test a 436MHz high gain antenna. My plan is to
construct a simple dipole with a 1:1 balun for 436MHz as a reference antenna
and construct another dipole with a 1:1 balun to receive the test signal,
measure it with a diode detector and a milli-amp meter (field strength
meter) at the shack. Do the calculation and have the antenna gain.
This seems to me to be fairly straight forward, but has anyone carried out
similar measurements and concur with the approach or are there are there
traps and pit falls that I need to be aware of. Or is their simply a better
way?


I've done it on 1296MHz in a similar way. However I borrowed a
calibrated step attenuator and took the difference in readings between
the reference dipole and the antenna under test as the gain for the same
detector reading to avoid nonlinearities. You can also measure antenna
gain using sun noise on 70cm, but that's a bit trickier.

Brian GM4DIJ


--
Brian Howie
  #8   Report Post  
Old October 5th 03, 08:44 AM
Roy Lewallen
 
Posts: n/a
Default

There are a lot of factors that can potentially affect measurements. The
first and most obvious is impedance matching, which has to be done to
extract the maximum possible power from the antennas (assuming that this
is what you'll be doing when actually using the antenna) and delivering
a known amount of power to each. Another is to make sure the feedlines
aren't radiating or picking up signals, by using proper baluns, which
you've mentioned. Move the feedlines around and change their lengths,
making sure the results don't change. If they do, your baluns aren't
adequate. If you want quantitative measurements, you'll have to
carefully calibrate your signal strength meter at the power level
involved. Don't make assumptions about its linearity. Better yet would
be to carefully match the antennas to 50 ohms, then insert a step
attenuator in series with the Yagi in the 50 ohm environment and
increase the attenuation until it reads the same as the dipole. That
way, the FS meter linearity is immaterial (although the attenuator
accuracy is important). Then there's the possibility of signals radiated
off the back of the dipole being reflected from near or distant objects
which would affect the dipole's measured field strength more than it
would the Yagi's. The different widths of the forward lobes can also
cause unequal reflections. Although reflections can affect the forward
gain up to several dB, their impact on nulls or front/back measurements
is likely to be greater.

I'd do a couple of things. One is to build an NBS reference Yagi which
is easy to construct and has a well known and documented gain. It's also
easy to model. Modern modeling programs do very well with full size
Yagis. Measure this on your range and verify that the measurements agree
with its known properties. Another check would be to rotate the dipole
and see if its pattern is what it should be. And rotate the NBS Yagi and
verify that its pattern matches modeled results. Only after doing those
tests would I have reasonable confidence in other measurements made with
similar types of antennas.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL

Peter wrote:
Hi all.

This may seem like a fairly basic question. But here we go!

I want to performance test a 436MHz high gain antenna. My plan is to
construct a simple dipole with a 1:1 balun for 436MHz as a reference antenna
and construct another dipole with a 1:1 balun to receive the test signal,
measure it with a diode detector and a milli-amp meter (field strength
meter) at the shack. Do the calculation and have the antenna gain.
This seems to me to be fairly straight forward, but has anyone carried out
similar measurements and concur with the approach or are there are there
traps and pit falls that I need to be aware of. Or is their simply a better
way?


Cheers

--
Peter Miles VK3YSF
Melbourne, Australia





  #9   Report Post  
Old October 5th 03, 08:44 AM
Roy Lewallen
 
Posts: n/a
Default

There are a lot of factors that can potentially affect measurements. The
first and most obvious is impedance matching, which has to be done to
extract the maximum possible power from the antennas (assuming that this
is what you'll be doing when actually using the antenna) and delivering
a known amount of power to each. Another is to make sure the feedlines
aren't radiating or picking up signals, by using proper baluns, which
you've mentioned. Move the feedlines around and change their lengths,
making sure the results don't change. If they do, your baluns aren't
adequate. If you want quantitative measurements, you'll have to
carefully calibrate your signal strength meter at the power level
involved. Don't make assumptions about its linearity. Better yet would
be to carefully match the antennas to 50 ohms, then insert a step
attenuator in series with the Yagi in the 50 ohm environment and
increase the attenuation until it reads the same as the dipole. That
way, the FS meter linearity is immaterial (although the attenuator
accuracy is important). Then there's the possibility of signals radiated
off the back of the dipole being reflected from near or distant objects
which would affect the dipole's measured field strength more than it
would the Yagi's. The different widths of the forward lobes can also
cause unequal reflections. Although reflections can affect the forward
gain up to several dB, their impact on nulls or front/back measurements
is likely to be greater.

I'd do a couple of things. One is to build an NBS reference Yagi which
is easy to construct and has a well known and documented gain. It's also
easy to model. Modern modeling programs do very well with full size
Yagis. Measure this on your range and verify that the measurements agree
with its known properties. Another check would be to rotate the dipole
and see if its pattern is what it should be. And rotate the NBS Yagi and
verify that its pattern matches modeled results. Only after doing those
tests would I have reasonable confidence in other measurements made with
similar types of antennas.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL

Peter wrote:
Hi all.

This may seem like a fairly basic question. But here we go!

I want to performance test a 436MHz high gain antenna. My plan is to
construct a simple dipole with a 1:1 balun for 436MHz as a reference antenna
and construct another dipole with a 1:1 balun to receive the test signal,
measure it with a diode detector and a milli-amp meter (field strength
meter) at the shack. Do the calculation and have the antenna gain.
This seems to me to be fairly straight forward, but has anyone carried out
similar measurements and concur with the approach or are there are there
traps and pit falls that I need to be aware of. Or is their simply a better
way?


Cheers

--
Peter Miles VK3YSF
Melbourne, Australia





  #10   Report Post  
Old October 5th 03, 12:04 PM
Ed Price
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Roy Lewallen" wrote in message
...
There are a lot of factors that can potentially affect measurements. The
first and most obvious is impedance matching, which has to be done to
extract the maximum possible power from the antennas (assuming that this
is what you'll be doing when actually using the antenna) and delivering
a known amount of power to each. Another is to make sure the feedlines
aren't radiating or picking up signals, by using proper baluns, which
you've mentioned. Move the feedlines around and change their lengths,
making sure the results don't change. If they do, your baluns aren't
adequate. If you want quantitative measurements, you'll have to
carefully calibrate your signal strength meter at the power level
involved. Don't make assumptions about its linearity. Better yet would
be to carefully match the antennas to 50 ohms, then insert a step
attenuator in series with the Yagi in the 50 ohm environment and
increase the attenuation until it reads the same as the dipole. That
way, the FS meter linearity is immaterial (although the attenuator
accuracy is important). Then there's the possibility of signals radiated
off the back of the dipole being reflected from near or distant objects
which would affect the dipole's measured field strength more than it
would the Yagi's. The different widths of the forward lobes can also
cause unequal reflections. Although reflections can affect the forward
gain up to several dB, their impact on nulls or front/back measurements
is likely to be greater.

I'd do a couple of things. One is to build an NBS reference Yagi which
is easy to construct and has a well known and documented gain. It's also
easy to model. Modern modeling programs do very well with full size
Yagis. Measure this on your range and verify that the measurements agree
with its known properties. Another check would be to rotate the dipole
and see if its pattern is what it should be. And rotate the NBS Yagi and
verify that its pattern matches modeled results. Only after doing those
tests would I have reasonable confidence in other measurements made with
similar types of antennas.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL



I thought that NIST prefers a dipole antenna up to 1 GHz, and then a
waveguide-fed horn beyond that. I would think that a pyramidal horn would be
more predictable that a Yagi, and not unreasonably large, even for 400 MHz.
Plus, the construction is simpler, and the design is more robust over time
(i.e., it's easy to bend a Yagi element slightly, not enough to notice it,
but enough to shift performance).

Ed
WB6WSN


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Inverted ground plane antenna: compared with normal GP and low dipole. Serge Stroobandt, ON4BAA Antenna 8 February 24th 11 10:22 PM
Poor quality low + High TV channels? How much dB in Preamp? lbbs Antenna 16 December 13th 03 03:01 PM
Antenna Range Testing. Peter Antenna 13 October 9th 03 06:31 AM
Antenna Range Testing. Peter Homebrew 22 October 9th 03 06:31 AM
Antenna Range Testing. Peter Homebrew 0 October 5th 03 01:10 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:26 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017