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ashwanthh November 9th 10 08:58 AM

Vswr Meter
 
Hi all,


For my RF project, I want to measure vswr readings, in order to that I was planning to construct a VSWR meter. The concept of VSWR is to calculate the ratio of Voltage transmitted to the Voltage reflected. So my basic question is,

1. What sensor/instrument is used to measure the voltages from the coax cable(in my case)?

Please some one help me with some ideas

david November 9th 10 12:55 PM

Vswr Meter
 
On Tue, 09 Nov 2010 07:58:41 +0000, ashwanthh rearranged some electrons to
say:

Hi all,


For my RF project, I want to measure vswr readings, in order to that I
was planning to construct a VSWR meter. The concept of VSWR is to
calculate the ratio of Voltage transmitted to the Voltage reflected. So
my basic question is,

1. What sensor/instrument is used to measure the voltages from the coax
cable(in my case)?

Please some one help me with some ideas


Google is over there ---

Kba November 10th 10 08:32 AM

Vswr Meter
 
On 9.11.2010 9:58, ashwanthh wrote:
Hi all,


For my RF project, I want to measure vswr readings, in order to
that I was planning to construct a VSWR meter.

1. What sensor/instrument is used to measure the voltages from the coax
cable(in my case)?


There are several means depending on frequency used, transmission lines,
sampling transformers and other like resistive bridges.
One useful source could be to look at N2PK web page, he has done
measurements for HF range bridge.

gl kba



Andrew VK3BFA[_3_] November 12th 10 03:15 PM

Vswr Meter
 
On Nov 9, 6:58*pm, ashwanthh
wrote:
Hi all,

For my RF project, I want to measure vswr readings, in order to
that I was planning to construct a VSWR meter. The concept of VSWR is to
calculate the ratio of Voltage transmitted to the Voltage reflected. So
my basic question is,

1. What sensor/instrument is used to measure the voltages from the coax
cable(in my case)?

Please some one help me with some ideas

--
ashwanthh


Dont know where you are, but get yourself a copy of the ARRL handbook
- doesnt matter the age - and all will be explained....

Andrew VK3BFA

raypsi November 12th 10 06:47 PM

Vswr Meter
 

Hey OT
:

Most so called VSWR meters will give you a reading but is it a true
reading? Not likely, by the time the reflected wave comes back down
the cable it has lost some voltage because of cable losses.

A true method would be to measure the voltage at the antenna,
telemeterize the voltage reading and send it back to the VSWR meter to
compare to the output voltage of the tx. And use a dual cross meter
so the ratio is calculated by the meter scale with no adjustment
needed. Except to calibrate it just once.

73 OT,
de n8zu



On Nov 9, 3:58*am, ashwanthh
wrote: Hi all,

For my RF project, I want to measure vswr readings, in order to
that I was planning to construct a VSWR meter. The concept of VSWR is to
calculate the ratio of Voltage transmitted to the Voltage reflected. So
my basic question is,

1. What sensor/instrument is used to measure the voltages from the coax
cable(in my case)?

Please some one help me with some ideas

--
ashwanthh



Paul Keinanen November 13th 10 01:21 PM

Vswr Meter
 
On Tue, 9 Nov 2010 07:58:41 +0000, ashwanthh
wrote:

For my RF project, I want to measure vswr readings,


The first question is why ?

If you want to tune some HF antenna to resonance within a specific
ham band, just use a noise bridge and adjust the antenna dimensions
accordingly.

For VHF/UHF, the antenna dimensions are even more critical, i.e. the
antenna feedpoint impedance should be the same as the feedline
impedance. Due to the cable losses, any ATU at the lower end would be
completely unacceptable.


K7ITM December 15th 10 02:52 AM

Vswr Meter
 
On Nov 8, 11:58*pm, ashwanthh
wrote:
Hi all,

For my RF project, I want to measure vswr readings, in order to
that I was planning to construct a VSWR meter. The concept of VSWR is to
calculate the ratio of Voltage transmitted to the Voltage reflected. So
my basic question is,

1. What sensor/instrument is used to measure the voltages from the coax
cable(in my case)?

Please some one help me with some ideas

--
ashwanthh


What is your "RF project"? What frequency or range of frequencies?
What power level?

Pretty much all SWR meters don't actually measure the forward and
reverse voltages directly, but deduce them from measurement of the
voltage and the current on a transmission line at a point along the
line. Then, knowing that the forward voltage divided by the forward
current (including phase) equals the line impedance, and also equals
the reverse voltage divided by the reverse current, you can deduce the
forward and reverse voltages (and forward and reverse currents). You
use the line impedance in the calculation, and if you've assumed a
line impedance different from the impedance of the line you're
actually measuring, you'll get an answer that's not correct for your
actual line. The "calculation" is commonly done with analog
electrical parts in typical ham SWR meters, and there is generally a
way to adjust the parts so that the meter reads correctly for the line
impedance you want to use--but you must actually do the check/
calibration or you won't know. (The calibration may involve just
adjusting a variable part, or it may involve replacing a fixed-value
part with one of a different value...not nearly so easy to get it
right.) Also, the accuracy of many ham-type SWR meters suffers if you
don't operate them at the right power level, because of non-linearity
in the detector diodes; there are ways around that (e.g. using non-
diode power detectors or operating the detector at a fixed full scale
range).

It's also possible to measure just the voltage at a few appropriately-
spaced points along a line and deduce the SWR more directly from those
readings, but this is very seldom done in practice. See "slotted line
measurements" for more details.

Cheers,
Tom


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