RE: Radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz

2002-11-14 Thread Mazzola, Santo

Richard,

My previous experience with TWT amplifiers is that as you say they do
not like excessive VSWR's. Chamber efects is one thing that would cause bad
VSWR.  Another way is turning them on before the antenna is attached.
Another way is to misthread the acble attached to the TWT. 
  I seem to remember that certain TWT's came with an option of an
isolator on the input that made them better able to handle short term bad
VSWR's.  If the one you are looking at has this option it would  be a plus.
  My general experience is be very carfeul with them and still they may
not last that long.  Check the repair history of the used TWT if you can.  


Sandy Mazzola

-Original Message-
From: richwo...@tycoint.com [mailto:richwo...@tycoint.com]
Sent: Wednesday, November 13, 2002 9:00 AM
To: emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
Subject: Radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz



I need to make a decision on an amplifier for radiated immunity testing in
the 1-2 GHz range. The choices appear to be a new solid state amplifier ( I
have not located a used one) or a used TWT amp. Is anyone using a TWT
amplifier for radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz? Do I need to be
concerned about protecting the tube from damage caused by excessive VSWR
cause by, perhaps, chamber effects? Is there anything else I need to know
about TWT amps (yeah, I know - throw it way if the tube dies)?

Richard Woods
Sensormatic Electronics
Tyco International


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RE: Radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz

2002-11-14 Thread Price, Ed


>-Original Message-
>From: richwo...@tycoint.com [mailto:richwo...@tycoint.com]
>Sent: Wednesday, November 13, 2002 6:00 AM
>To: emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
>Subject: Radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz
>
>
>
>I need to make a decision on an amplifier for radiated 
>immunity testing in
>the 1-2 GHz range. The choices appear to be a new solid state 
>amplifier ( I
>have not located a used one) or a used TWT amp. Is anyone using a TWT
>amplifier for radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz? Do I need to be
>concerned about protecting the tube from damage caused by 
>excessive VSWR
>cause by, perhaps, chamber effects? Is there anything else I 
>need to know
>about TWT amps (yeah, I know - throw it way if the tube dies)?
>
>Richard Woods
>Sensormatic Electronics
>Tyco International
>


Rich:

A 1 Watt TWT octave-band amplifier is fairly common, and I have seen them
sell on eBay for a few hundred dollars. But 1 Watt (depending on antenna
performance & system losses) just barely gets you in to the lowest end of
immunity testing.

A 10 Watt amplifier might cost under $7k new, and would be a rare find at an
auction or from an inventory reduction at an equipment rental company. But
10 Watts will let you do most commercial immunity work.

A 20 Watt amplifier takes the "edge" off of trying to get the fields, and
also lets you do military work (with some patience). I use a set of Hughes
8050 20 Watt amps that cover 1 GHz to 18 GHz.

In a previous life, I had the luxury of 200 and 300 Watt TWT amplifiers.
They were the Varian VZ series, and I seem to recall they cost around $30k
each (in 1980 dollars). I don't know if anyone even makes new equipment like
that any more; maybe you can't even replace the TWT's in them.

Whatever you get, try to be sure that the amps have circulator protection.
TWT's don't like reflected power, and immunity setups almost guarantee
ranges of lousy VSWR. The circulator routes that reflected power away from
the TWT and into a termination. Most lab amplifiers will either come with a
circulator as standard, or have it as a factory option. If you get an amp
that doesn't have an internal circulator, endeavor to get an external one
ASAP.

Re TWT amp operation. The tube makes up maybe 80% of the amplifier cost.
Every time I flip on the TWT amp switch, my finger twitches a little. TWT
amps don't seem to ever die while in use; rather, they die just as you start
them up. I'm very cautious about protecting the amp from physical shock, and
I always let the main power stay on for about 5 minutes after RF operation
to let the TWT cool down as much as possible.

One further suggestion; place the TWT amp as close as possible to the
antenna. Since a TWT amp will have about 40 dB of gain, you can usually
afford to lose a few dB in a long coax between the signal source and the
amp, and still be able to drive the TWT to its limit. This arrangement will
but maximum power to your antenna. All of the TWT amps I have ever used
would withstand whatever RF was inside the shielded room, maybe since they
were relatively "dumb" amplifiers. You might have a problem with this
technique if your TWT amp has a microprocessor controller or some other
fancy features. And, even for the 1 GHz to 2 GHz range, don't use even good
coax, like RG-214. Get either semi-rigid solid wall coax, or get the superb
flexible stuff from Gore or Storm.

Finally, make sure that your leveling pre-amplifier will control the entire
frequency range you are going to use. Some systems (like my IFI LPA-5) might
require an optional variable-gain amplifier deck for frequencies above 1
GHz. (Maybe this isn't an issue for you, if you are controlling level by
computer control of the signal source amplitude.)

Regards,

Ed


Ed Price
ed.pr...@cubic.com
Electromagnetic Compatibility Lab
Cubic Defense Systems
San Diego, CA  USA
858-505-2780  (Voice)
858-505-1583  (Fax)
Military & Avionics EMC Is Our Specialty
Shake-Bake-Shock - Metrology - Reliability Analysis

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Re: Radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz

2002-11-13 Thread Ken Javor

They're usually VSWR tripped.  I f you want one to operate with high vswr,
then you need a circulator or isolator to absorb the reverse power.

--
>From: richwo...@tycoint.com
>To: emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org
>Subject: Radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz
>Date: Wed, Nov 13, 2002, 8:00 AM
>

>
> I need to make a decision on an amplifier for radiated immunity testing in
> the 1-2 GHz range. The choices appear to be a new solid state amplifier ( I
> have not located a used one) or a used TWT amp. Is anyone using a TWT
> amplifier for radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz? Do I need to be
> concerned about protecting the tube from damage caused by excessive VSWR
> cause by, perhaps, chamber effects? Is there anything else I need to know
> about TWT amps (yeah, I know - throw it way if the tube dies)?
>
> Richard Woods
> Sensormatic Electronics
> Tyco International
>
>
> ---
> This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety
> Technical Committee emc-pstc discussion list.
>
> Visit our web site at:  http://www.ewh.ieee.org/soc/emcs/pstc/
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>
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>  Richard Nute:   ri...@ieee.org
>  Jim Bacher: j.bac...@ieee.org
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Radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz

2002-11-13 Thread richwoods

I need to make a decision on an amplifier for radiated immunity testing in
the 1-2 GHz range. The choices appear to be a new solid state amplifier ( I
have not located a used one) or a used TWT amp. Is anyone using a TWT
amplifier for radiated immunity testing above 1 GHz? Do I need to be
concerned about protecting the tube from damage caused by excessive VSWR
cause by, perhaps, chamber effects? Is there anything else I need to know
about TWT amps (yeah, I know - throw it way if the tube dies)?

Richard Woods
Sensormatic Electronics
Tyco International


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