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#1
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Hi folks,
I needed to produce some referance power levels that were 'down' from my calibrated 0DbM generator. (It's output power is auto leveled, and non-adjustable) 9445mhz, center of one of the maritine radar bands. I built two little aperature plates that look like a waveguide cover, but have a hole drilled in the exact center. A .185" hole provides about 45db of reduction, and a .310" hole provides about 25db of reduction. There are some differances of exact gain reduction depending on where in the waveguide system I place these plates. (Close to source, or close to receiver) Perhaps up to about 3 db differance, not a big worry for me. Do the numbers sound correct? Should I have attenuated in a differant way? Like perhaps a slot, instead of a round hole?? If I want to make some more of these plates, is there some math to help me predict the size of the hole for 10db? Thanks for your help and comments. I am exploring some new areas here. |
#2
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You might google for "waveguide vane attenuator". That is the device
used to measure fade margin on microwave links. A company called ARRA makes them, so did HP at one time. There is a lossy vane which rotates into the waveguide, turned by a calibrated knob and scale. Might be worth your while to check e-bay to see if you can find exactly what you want. Also some old microwave radios had these attached to the output waveguide. Of course you need to find X-band. The-RFI-EMI-GUY gudmundur wrote: Hi folks, I needed to produce some referance power levels that were 'down' from my calibrated 0DbM generator. (It's output power is auto leveled, and non-adjustable) 9445mhz, center of one of the maritine radar bands. I built two little aperature plates that look like a waveguide cover, but have a hole drilled in the exact center. A .185" hole provides about 45db of reduction, and a .310" hole provides about 25db of reduction. There are some differances of exact gain reduction depending on where in the waveguide system I place these plates. (Close to source, or close to receiver) Perhaps up to about 3 db differance, not a big worry for me. Do the numbers sound correct? Should I have attenuated in a differant way? Like perhaps a slot, instead of a round hole?? If I want to make some more of these plates, is there some math to help me predict the size of the hole for 10db? Thanks for your help and comments. I am exploring some new areas here. -- Joe Leikhim K4SAT "The RFI-EMI-GUY" The Lost Deep Thoughts By: Jack Handey Before a mad scientist goes mad, there's probably a time when he's only partially mad. And this is the time when he's going to throw his best parties. |
#3
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I needed to produce some referance power levels that were 'down' from
my calibrated 0DbM generator. (It's output power is auto leveled, and non-adjustable) 9445mhz, center of one of the maritine radar bands. I've never worked in this band, but recall that some lower-frequency signal generators use a "waveguide beyond cutoff" attenuator. If you can find some waveguide sections designed for a sufficiently higher band, the attenuation will be proportional to their length. This doesn't address impedance mismatch, but neither does your method. 73, Fred, K4DII |
#5
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