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HP 8340b Operating Instructions

HP 8340b
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USING
THE
8340B/41B
POWER
CONTROL
AND
MODULATION
SYSTEMS.
The
preceding
explanations
of
the
power
control
and
modulation
functions
are
sufficient
for
the
majority
of
applications;
however,
to
extract
the
utmost
performance
from
this
instrument
the
follow¬
ing
special
information
might
be
helpful.
INTERNAL
LEVELING
The
RF
Output
is
controlled
by
the
automatic
level
control
(ALC)
circuit,
otherwise
referred
to
as
the
leveling
loop.
Figure
3-29
shows
a
simplified
diagram
of
this
system.
The
leveling
loop
is
a
feedback
control
system,
in
which
the
output
power
is
measured
and
compared
to
the
desired
level.
If
the
two
are
not
equal
the
loop
changes
the
output
until
they
are
equal.
The
two
inputs
labeled
“ALC
INPUTS"
convey
the
desired
power
level.
One
of
these
is
a
voltage
derived
from
the
power
value
shown
in
the
ENTRY
DISPLAY.
In
the
absence
of
modulation
this
voltage
is
used
to
set
the
output
power
level.
The
amplitude
modulation
(AM)
input
causes
the
output
to
increase
or
decrease
relative
to
this
level.
(The
pulse
modulation
input
is
essentially
an
ON/OFF
switch,
not
an
ALC
input.)
The
RF
power
level
from
the
level
control
circuits
is
referred
to
as
the
“ALC
level,”
and
is
measured
by
a
crystal
detector.
The
DC
output
from
this
detector
is
fed
back
to
the
level
control
circuits
for
comparison
with
the
ALC
inputs.
Since
crystal
detectors
lose
sensitivity
at
low
power
levels,
the
detector
provides
an
accurate
power
indication
for
ALC
levels
down
to
—10
dBm,
and
is
acceptable
(±1dB)
down
to
-20
dBm.
The
maximum
amount
of
power
available
from
the
level
control
circuits
varies
with
RF
frequency,
from
+1
dBm
specified
at
26.5
GHz
(HP
8340B
only)
to
typically
+21
dBm
at
4.5
GHz;
therefore,
the
level
control
circuits
can
provide
continuous
control
of
ALC
levels
over
a
maximum
span
of
approximately
—20
dBm
to
+20
dBm.
Coupled
Mode
Since
many
applications
require
power
levels
less
than
—20
dBm,
a
step
attentuator
1
is
provided
that
has
a
range
of
0
to
-90
dB
in
10
dB
steps.
Thus,
power
levels
down
to
-110
dBm
is
achieved
when
the
attenuator
and
ALC
work
in
conjunction.
Because
of
the
attenuator,
the
ALC
will
normally
be
used
over
only
a
portion
of
its
40
dB
range:
Since
accuracy
suffers
below
10dBm
and
at
some
(HP
8340B)
frequencies
only
+1
dBm
is
available,
the
ALC
is
normally
set
between
-10
and
0
dBm.
To
get
power
less
than
—100
dBm,
the
attenuator
is
left
at
—90dB,
and
the
ALC
used
from
—10
to
—20
dBm;
however,
the
ALC
accuracy
and
noise
performance
is
degraded
at
this
level,
and
is
the
reason
that
some
specifications
apply
only
down
to
-100
dBm.
At
frequencies
where
power
levels
above
0
dBm
are
desired,
the
attenuator
is
left
a
0
dB
and
the
ALC
used
from
0
to
+20
dBm
(or
whatever
power
is
available
at
the
RF
frequency
in
use).
The
proper
combination
of
ALC
and
attenuator
is
decided
by
the
internal
microprocessor:
the
user
need
only
set
the
desired
power
in
the
ENTRY
DISPLAY
via
the
[POWER]
key.
i
HP
8340B’s
equipped
with
Options
001
or
005
are
not
supplied
with
the
step
attenuator.
3-98
Operating
Information
HP
8340B/41B

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HP 8340b Specifications

General IconGeneral
BrandHP
Model8340b
CategoryInverter
LanguageEnglish

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