gadly
Newbie level 6
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I have so lusted after one of those Copper Mountain VNAs!
Although they're a good deal compared to a *real* VNA for professional use, they are by no means "low-cost" in the amateur/hobbyist sense of the word.
Their Australian distributor recently quoted me (A$ ~= US$):
~$28,000 for the 804/1 model,
~$16,000 for the 304/1 model, and
~$4,000 for the 1300/1 model.
(+ ~$700 for the calibration kit). Ouch.
If you can get by with scalar measurements, the Signal Hound + tracking generator (**broken link removed**) is worth a look for (a far more reasonable) $1500 total cost.
It is a true shame that some small company has not come up with affordable spectrum analyzers and network analyzers by now. There should be a two port DC-10 Ghz vector network analyzer out there for maybe $4000 USD. There is not much inside of these things--it could be done on one PC board.
I have a project, for instance, where I need to measure amplitude and phase of S21 thru a media, 1 to 2.5 GHz, and I think I can do that for around $120 USD in good quantity. It is not going to be quite as accurate as an HP network analyzer, but certainly not $50K!!!! All you need are 2 phase locked sources, some printed couplers, mixer chips, and a DSP processor chip.
There should be a two port DC-10 Ghz vector network analyzer out there for maybe $4000 USD. There is not much inside of these things--it could be done on one PC board.
I have so lusted after one of those Copper Mountain VNAs!
Although they're a good deal compared to a *real* VNA for professional use, they are by no means "low-cost" in the amateur/hobbyist sense of the word.
Their Australian distributor recently quoted me (A$ ~= US$):
~$28,000 for the 804/1 model,
~$16,000 for the 304/1 model, and
~$4,000 for the 1300/1 model.
(+ ~$700 for the calibration kit). Ouch.
I have so lusted after one of those Copper Mountain VNAs!
Although they're a good deal compared to a *real* VNA for professional use, they are by no means "low-cost" in the amateur/hobbyist sense of the word.
Their Australian distributor recently quoted me (A$ ~= US$):
~$28,000 for the 804/1 model,
~$16,000 for the 304/1 model, and
~$4,000 for the 1300/1 model.
(+ ~$700 for the calibration kit). Ouch.
If you can get by with scalar measurements, the Signal Hound + tracking generator (**broken link removed**) is worth a look for (a far more reasonable) $1500 total cost.
Normally, a Female Open calibration component would have a protruding center conductor with a length of 13.68 ps (or more if the measure is offset). The Female Open of N1.1 does not have a center conductor, so it is specified as -13.68 ps (which is the distance from the port plane to the reference plane), which allows us to make precise measurements of the absolute values of the phase.
If you are simply working for personal use you could use this VNA for about £550 with a cal-kit: **broken link removed**
Cheers,
Joel Richard
ca.linkedin.com/in/joelrichard/
The original poster was looking for 2-5 GHz - what is well beyond the capabilites of a VWNA.
Dave
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