Brian,
 
According to the standard, there is a linearity check that must be performed to 
insure the amp is not in saturation. This check must be performed regardless of 
which method is used. Granted, you will know at the end of the constant-field 
method that you might have a power problem, without having to run the linearity 
check, but it still needs to be done so you don't really save time.
 
I've tried the constant field method before where one of the outlying points 
was in a null and the amp did not have enough power to pull it up to 18v/m.  
The only way I could complete the calibration was to use the constand power 
method, so at least in this scenario I had wasted time with the constant-field 
method. I wish I had a better chamber and bigger amp, but management just would 
not buy them for me. :-)
 
Bob R.
 

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


From: Kunde, Brian <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: IEC 61000-4-3 Field Uniformity Measurement
To: "EMC-PSTC" <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, February 1, 2012, 10:38 AM


Do you only want to determine Field Uniformity or do you also want to determine 
the power you need for testing?

If you use the constant power method, it works good to determine uniformity but 
I feel the data collected is not the best for determining test power. Using the 
Constant Field Strength method and storing all the data, you can determine 
field uniformity and better determine your test power in one test which can 
save time. The only thing is you have to know you have a good setup and enough 
power to perform the test with your amps operating well within their linear 
range (no clipping).

The Other Brian


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of WNya
Sent: Wednesday, February 01, 2012 4:36 AM
To: EMC-PSTC
Subject: IEC 61000-4-3 Field Uniformity Measurement

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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