• [KB6NU] Trade magazine articles: home lab equipment, antennas 101, AC g

    From KB6NU via rec.radio.amateur.moderat@21:1/5 to All on Tue Apr 26 06:05:41 2022
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    Trade magazine articles: home lab equipment, antennas 101, AC grounding

    Posted: 25 Apr 2022 01:26 PM PDT https://www.kb6nu.com/trade-magazine-articles-home-lab-equipment-antennas-101-ac-grounding/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email


    Here are some articles from the electronics trade magazines (well, online magazines, anyway) that I found interesting:

    Equipment Recommendations for a Home Electronics Lab

    Some of the authors suggestions may seem a bit pricey for a radio amateurs
    home lab, but good test equipment will yield good results. He writes:

    With one exception, I like test equipment with knobs. That refers to
    scopes, signal sources, and power supplies. Siglent makes a nice,
    economical line of these kinds of instruments and they’re all available tomorrow via Amazon. You will probably need multiple power supplies, and you’ll want an old-school linear supply for audio work. Once upon a time, I’d have said buy only HP T&M gear (because I worked there, so I have a preference), and older HP gear from eBay can be nice, but the Siglent stuff comes with a warranty.

    Welcome to Antennas 101

    In a very short space, the author does a pretty good job of explaining
    antennas and some of their parameters. For example, heres how he explains antenna efficiency:

    Antenna efficiency is like efficiency in general—the ratio of power out to power in. However, it’s designated in several different ways. In most
    cases, efficiencies account for the I2R losses, losses in any dielectric,
    and losses based on coupling to other devices. What may not be included is
    any loss related to antenna and transmission- line mismatch losses,
    resulting in reflected power and a higher SWR.

    However, some measures of efficiency factor in any change in antenna
    radiation resistance variation. Most small antennas aren’t that efficient. Anything better than 50% to 60% is usually good, but always seek to improve
    it if you can.

    AC grounding: essential, dangerous or both?

    The first thing that the author of this piece does is to explain that, A
    large part of the confusion comes from the ambiguous and this sloppy terminology associated with that innocent-sounding seven-letter word. He
    then explains that the word ground can refer to any one of three types of circuit connections:


    Earth ground where the circuit is actually connected to Earth, which acts
    as an infinite source and sink for electrons;
    Common (may also be called signal ground), which establishes a 0-V point in
    a circuit (and there is often more than one of these in the circuit). It’s usually very misleading to even use the word ground with this one.
    Chassis ground, which connects all nominally zero-volt potential points in
    a circuit; it may be connected to Earth ground, but often cannot be as
    there is no Earth ground for many devices such as most portable, battery-operated ones; here, it may be misleading to use the word ground if
    it is not connected to a real Earth ground.



    The rest of the article is equally enlightening.

    The post Trade magazine articles: home lab equipment, antennas 101, AC grounding appeared first on KB6NUs Ham Radio Blog.

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