Darktrax
Full Member level 5
Choose for example a X-Band LNA followed by some transmission line, and maybe a down-converter to L-Band.
There are sometimes also bandpass filter to reject nearby uplink transmit signals.
I can find fine LNA kit out there claiming +/- 1dB gain variation across a passband around 700MHz wide.
Some have a second specification, typically 0.5dB over any 40MHz wide part within.
The down-converter specifications similarly might claim typically +/- 1dB in well respected kit.
So putting together the chain, it is possible that some drop in one place might be compensated by a lift elsewhere, but in the unlucky scenario, the variations might add in the worst way.
When a system is asked for, having less than (say) 0.5dB or 0.6dB gain variation, how can this be reasonable?
So what is the norm here? How good is good enough?
There are sometimes also bandpass filter to reject nearby uplink transmit signals.
I can find fine LNA kit out there claiming +/- 1dB gain variation across a passband around 700MHz wide.
Some have a second specification, typically 0.5dB over any 40MHz wide part within.
The down-converter specifications similarly might claim typically +/- 1dB in well respected kit.
So putting together the chain, it is possible that some drop in one place might be compensated by a lift elsewhere, but in the unlucky scenario, the variations might add in the worst way.
When a system is asked for, having less than (say) 0.5dB or 0.6dB gain variation, how can this be reasonable?
So what is the norm here? How good is good enough?