Wendy,
 
It is my belief that the best way to go is the constant power method. This is 
especially true if the chamber may be marginal with respect to uniformity, and 
also if the amplifier is operating close to its limit.
 
Example: If you have a field uniformity situation where one of the corners is 
very low, you may not have enough margin with the amplifier to be able to drive 
that probe position to the required level. There is a good chance that 
this probe position will be lumped into the 25% that are discarded anyway. 
Driving the amp close to its limit will also drive up the harmonics in the 
field enough that the field probe may start responding to the harmonics instead 
of the fundamental, which is especially true with some of the bilog antennas at 
the lowest frequencies (I've personally witnessed this). This will cause errors 
in the uniformity calculations.
 
Using the constant power method, you record the power required to level at one 
probe position (I pick one in the middle) then replay that level at all the 
probe positions and use the probe readings to calculate uniformity. Just make 
sure that the lowest probe readings are well above the probe's noise floor.
 
Now if you have a REALLY good chamber, a really flat response antenna with a 
wide beamwidth, and an amplifier that is 4 times more than what is needed, 
either method will work well. :-)
 
 
Bob R.
 


--- On Wed, 2/1/12, WNya <[email protected]> wrote:


From: WNya <[email protected]>
Subject: IEC 61000-4-3 Field Uniformity Measurement
To: "EMC-PSTC" <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, February 1, 2012, 4:35 AM


Dear Experts,

Two methods are mentioned in the standard - constant power calibration and 
constant field strength calibration. 

Is there a preferred method (benefits?) of one over the other? If yes, why? 
What would be the considerations to use constant field strength instead of 
constant power? Is it related to the equipment setup?

Our system integrator recommended constant power method because he is, as he 
claimed, more familiar with it. 

Although both achieved the same purpose, what are the engineering differences 
between them?

Sent from Wendy.Nya iPhone

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