That's my understanding too.

Ralph McDiarmid, AScT 
Compliance Engineering Group 
Xantrex Technology Inc


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Clif
Brick
Sent: Thursday, December 04, 2008 8:50 AM
To: Gert Gremmen; [email protected]
Subject: RE: EMI Receiver

I could be wrong as it's been a few years, but it seems to me that a
spectrum analyzer receiver in overload will show a signal to be a lower
amplitude than it really is (in addition to ghosts, spurs and intermod
products).  The issue is one of compression, and in fact an overlaoded
analyzer will show comply when in fact the device is non-compliant just
as readily as the opposite.

If an overlaod condition exists, you may get a reading of a real (from
the EUT) signal that is say 0dBm, you add 10 dB of attenuation and get
-3dBm.  This means that in fact your signal is at least 7dB larger than
your display.  If you add 10 dB more and get say -7, you're still in
overload.  You would need to continue until you get linear response.
Important to understand is that it may be well outside of the band of
interest that the overlaoding signal is comin in on.  This is why
preselection helps....

Best regards,
Clif 


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Gert
Gremmen
Sent: Wednesday, December 03, 2008 2:27 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: EMI Receiver

>From "EUT cost to compliance" point of view I fully agree with  this
discussion about preselectors.
The only error one makes without preselector is that one may (not will)
need much more effort and cost to make your product compliant, as ghost
emissions may appear due to overload effects in any receiver
amplifier/mixer part, transient  limiter or elsewhere.
However, if your receiver/spectrumanlyser without preselector indicates
compliance the result is valid (other non-compliance aspects neglected).

Without preselector:

A non compliance result is NOT reliable
A compliance result IS reliable.


Another remark:

Most transient limiters contain an attenuator (20dB) in front of the
limiter. As a transient limiter will clip somewhere between 1 and 3
volts pk, the spikes that triggered the transient limiter were generated
by that "immature design" were of an amplitude very likely to have
destroyed the input of the analyser without the transient device (>20V)
!!

I have no relations with this company!!!
I stick to the (older?) R&S receivers, as they have shown to produce
consistent results over time, and have sufficient head room in their
amplifiers to never create overload problems, and do have decent
pre-selectors. In addition, they have no problems in meeting calibration
requirements over their lifetime.
Also, from a electronics designer point
of view, these instruments have been build without compromises.
(and I have looked inside !)
>From a company whose core business is professional RF one can expect
corresponding performance.
No durable experience with the newer receivers yet.

Regards,

Ing. Gert Gremmen




ce-test, qualified testing bv



Van: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] Namens Bob Richards
Verzonden: Wednesday, December 03, 2008 4:10 AM
Aan: [email protected]
Onderwerp: RE: EMI Receiver

--- On Tue, 12/2/08, Jim Eichner <[email protected]> wrote:

>Amazing the spectrum you get when a really large 50kHz switching 
>fundamental slams into the transient limiter.

I remember reading a long time ago that when a transient limiter starts
to clamp, it becomes a comb generator. I ran into that recently when
testing a product that initially appeared to fail by ~20dB. I don't know
what made me think to try it, but I removed the transient limiter and
installed an attenuator in its place. The emissions at 150khz dropped
drastically. A linearity check showed that I still had a problem,
though. I grabbed the one analyzer we have with a preselector, and got
passing results. 

FWIW, this was a power supply for VCCI testing. It easily passed (with
transient limiter) at 120Vac, but appeared to fail miserably at 100Vac,
50Hz.

Bob Richards, NCT.

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