Didier Juges wrote:
Another major difference between the older (sweeping) analyzers and the more 
modern ones (FFT) is that the sweep type analyzers only look at one particular 
frequency once per sweep, and for a short time, while the fft types pretty much 
look at the entire span continuously. That makes the fft type much more capable 
of identifying low duty cycle transmitters. If the signals you are interested 
in are CW, it will not make much difference, but that is not always the case.

If looking at signals or artifacts near noise, accumulation over time will provide a more consistent view. Shorter time to achieve the same monitoring time of several frequencies (as they is being monitored in parallel) also means that any instability in longterm cause less de-correlation.

I have the precursor to the HP4395A, the HP4195A. Nice unit, but what annoys me mostly is the lack of frequency range and that I could do with a little more of the accessories. Still, few network analyzers will do 1 mHz steps. I swept the 7 cesium peaks using it and only a mixer as part of diagnosis of my cesium beam. Hacking into the 12 MHz level worked nicely, and feeding the detector output to the mixer to modulate the swept sine so that it emulates a 12 MHz filter while it infact was doing just about 9 GHz was kind of sweet.

Oh, someone that has a Linux-tool for LIF floppies?

Cheers,
Magnus

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