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You will probably get more responses if you describe what you want in
more detail: frequency of operation, inline or test instrument, self contained or PC based, remote head, analog or digital display, cost, commercial or homebrew etc. ;-) ANY ideas. ANY schematics, Any The topic is "direct reading" :-) I haven't seen a lot of examples out there, but the project seems very simple; perhaps trivially simple. First, you build a directional coupler -- there are a number of designs out there, but none are especially difficult. Then you rectify the voltage and perhaps amplify it. Feed the two voltages into a microcontroller that does the math and operates the display (digital of course). Analog isn't going to be so popular because you not only need a meter (generally harder to get and expensive these days), but you will need some custom meter face, and what it needs to look like won't be all that obvious. Another possibility along these lines would be a little more analog-ish. Analog Devices makes a line of neat little "log amp" ICs. Feed them a sample of RF on one pin, and you get out a DC voltage which is proportional to the log of the RF voltage. They have a wide frequency range and if I recall correctly the Vout=log(Vin) relationship holds up pretty well over several decades of power level. Build two direction couplers, as suggested above, but without the rectifier diodes. The ARRL handbook has instructions for building directional couplers for HF out of copper pipe. For a physically smaller design (for lower power) google around for "stripline directional coupler", "monimatch", and similar terms, or go to the Boat Anchors Archive and hunt around for the manual for an old Heathkit SWR meter. Take the directionally-coupler-sampled RF signals (forward and reverse) and run them into a pair of the ADC log-amps. The two DC voltages which come out will be proportional to the logarithms of the forward and reverse voltages. If I remember my math correctly, this means that the difference of the two is proportional to the logarithm of the ratio of the forward and reverse voltages, and would thus be a pretty nice indication of the return loss in dB. Zero voltage difference would mean zero return loss (infinitely high SWR), and the voltage difference would increase with the return loss (lower SWR). The upper limit on the voltage difference will probably be set by the directionality limit of the directional couplers. Take this voltage difference, run it through a voltage-to-current converter (a.k.a. a series resistor) and into an analog meter, and *bingo* you've got a direct-reading SWR meter. It'll read at the high end of the scale for a 1:1 SWR and will not deflect if the SWR is infinitely high. It might need to be recalibrated for a proper full-scale deflection at 1:1 on any given frequency, to adjust for the directionality limits of the couplers. Take a look at the "DEM ABPM" (Down East Microwave All Band Power Meter) at www.downeastmicrowave.com - it's a professionally kitted version of a homebrew product, which uses one of the AD logamps for frequencies from ultrasonic up through UHF, and a less-sensitive-but- higher-frequency Linear Technologies part for frequencies from VHF through microwave. Readout is through a common DC-to-LED-bargraph IC. -- 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! |
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