Determining Physical End and Electrical End are the Same Point
There is only one sure way to confirm that the physical and electrical ends of a cable are the same point. Once the TDR has displayed the end of the cable as an open or short, the user must go to the opposite end of the cable and check to see that the TDRs evaluation is correct for open or short. If it is correct, change the termination to the opposite condition. Then return to the TDR and note that the trace has changed to the open or shorted condition set at the end of the cable and that the distance is the same. This will confirm you are viewing the entire length of the cable.
If the TDR does not change its trace when the end of the cable is terminated in the opposite condition, short or open, then the TDR has detected a fault on the cable at the distance indicated.
Matched Terminations
A matched termination is a resistive device that matches the cable’s impedance and connects the center conductor to the shield. When a TDR’s signal encounters this type of termination it is absorbed and does not produce a reflection. The TDR trace for either a pulse or step TDR will remain horizontal across the entire display never indicating an end to the cable. A matched termination should be suspected whenever the cable’s end is not found at distances well beyond the estimated physical end of the cable.
Cables connected to transmission and receiver equipment will most likely be connected to a matched termination. Cables connected to an antenna will appear as an open or as a short depending upon the antenna’s design.
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