From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ken Javor
Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2010 6:31 AM
To: Untitled
Subject: Re: Calibration supplier for signal generator with pulse modulation

 

And similarly, not because of MU but because of 17025 or perhaps ISO 9000, I’ve 
seen test equipment that could easily have been calibrated in house, such as 
current probes, LISNs and a 41 inch rod antenna have to be sent to the 
calibration lab.  This is totally unproductive, except for the calibration lab. 
 And I would argue further that it is detrimental to the discipline, because if 
you do your own calibration, you understand better how things work.

Oh, and my favorite, the calibration of microwave horn antennas, whose 
properties are entirely set by their linear dimensions. The measurement or 
verification that their dimensions have not changed since their original 
acquisition is so much more accurate than the direct measurement of their gain. 
 In fact any passive antenna used in the EMI measurement business can be easily 
checked visually for dimensional abnormalities, and those with a balun, such as 
a dipole, biconical or logperiodic can be checked for vswr using a directional 
coupler; no need for expensive and time consuming annual or semi-annual trips 
to a calibration facility.  If it isn’t physically damaged, and the vswr meets 
original specs, meaning the balun is good, the antenna is good.
 
Ken Javor

Phone: (256) 650-5261



Ken:

 

I completely agree, except….

 

I have seen a few strange and nasty things happen with horn antennas.

1.  Many horn antennas have a coupling pin in the throat of the waveguide to 
provide for coupling of the RF wave from the waveguide end of the antenna 
throat to the 50-Ohm coaxial system. This “pin” is often a precision machined 
and positioned extension of the center pin of a female type N coax connector. 
The efficiency and VSWR of the antenna is very sensitive to the positioning of 
that pin, but all is normally fine unless you do something dumb like poke 
something down the throat of the antenna. But consider what happens if you 
connect an improperly built coax cable to that antenna connector. In the case 
where the coax cable center pin extends too far out the end of the cable 
connector, you can wind up displacing the female connector center pin (and that 
critical launcher pin inside the antenna).

2.  If you use that antenna for both transmit and receive, it’s possible for 
high RF power (and/or very bad reflections) to create arcing at that launcher 
pin. You can also soften the dielectric of the antenna connector. Both of these 
will lead to changes in the antenna efficiency.

 

Sometimes, you may use a very basic horn antenna that ends with simply a 
waveguide flange. Not much can go wrong with the antenna, but almost everyone 
will use this antenna with a waveguide-to-coax adapter. Again, all the things I 
said above now apply to your adapter. I make a practice of sending my flanged 
horn antennas (at least the ones below 18 GHz) out for calibration with a 
permanently mated coax adapter mounted on them. That way, my cal data includes 
the adapter.

 

A good object lesson hit me just a few weeks ago. When I sent my 12 GHz to 18 
GHz flanged horn antenna out to my cal lab, I put a brand new female-female SMA 
adapter on the waveguide adapter (that adapter is odd; it has an SMA male coax 
connector). Later, my cal lab called me to ask how long I had been using that 
adapter. Turns out that the beautiful gold plated brand new adapter had a 
faulty center pin, and the VSWR and loss went completely wild (a bad resonance) 
at around 15 GHz.

 

Ed Price

[email protected] <blocked::mailto:[email protected]>      WB6WSN

NARTE Certified EMC Engineer

Electromagnetic Compatibility Lab

Cubic Defense Applications

San Diego, CA  USA

858-505-2780

Military & Avionics EMC Is Our Specialty

 

-

This message is from the IEEE Product Safety Engineering Society emc-pstc 
discussion list. To post a message to the list, send your e-mail to 
<[email protected]>

All emc-pstc postings are archived and searchable on the web at 
http://www.ieeecommunities.org/emc-pstc
Graphics (in well-used formats), large files, etc. can be posted to that URL. 

Website: http://www.ieee-pses.org/
Instructions: http://listserv.ieee.org/request/user-guide.html
List rules: http://www.ieee-pses.org/listrules.html 

For help, send mail to the list administrators:
Scott Douglas <[email protected]>
Mike Cantwell <[email protected]> 

For policy questions, send mail to:
Jim Bacher <[email protected]>
David Heald <[email protected]> 


Reply via email to