Search
Home Products Sales Contact Us Literature & Software  
AN215
Mixed or Poor Cable Types
Written by Paul DeWinter
  Save Application Notes (PDF)
Abstract

Whenever cables of different impedances (Zo) are mixed in a single coaxial run a serious impedance mismatch will result in a high amount of reflected signal. A step TDR can best identify the mismatched cable, its start, and its end.

General

Cable used in any transmission system or network must meet the correct impedance requirements for the equipment connected to the cable. Additionally, the cable should be within industry specifications for the impedance and resistance specified for both the system and the cable type. A Step TDR can verify both factors very quickly and pinpoint incorrect cables, mixed cables and lossy cables.

Mixed Cable Types

Mixed cable types are the easiest to spot on a step TDR. Figure 1 is a TDR PC Vision screen shot clearly showing a 10 foot piece of RG-58, 50 Ohm coax connected to a 22 foot piece of RG-59, 75 Ohm coax. Whether this cable run connects to a 50 Ohm or 75 Ohm system, it introduces some serious mismatch. Note how the step TDR clearly shows which section measures 50 Ohms and which measures 75 Ohm.


Figure 1

Poor Quality Cables

Old or cheaply made cables may create impedance mismatches. Though not as pronounced as the mixed cable example, these cables can contribute to undesired levels of reflect signal and signal attenuation. Figures 2 and 3 depict to types of poor cable. Figure 2 is the trace for a section of cable with lower impedance than the system’s 75 Ohm specification. Although both cables were marked 75 Ohms on the jacket the TDR verifies the one section has gone out of specification.



Figure 2

Another type of poor quality cable is one with a higher than normal resistance. These are known as “Lossy Cables.” They excessively attenuate transmitted signals. Figure 3 depicts what a lossy cable looks like on the 20/20 TDR’s display. The first 500 feet is good coax and the next 250 feet is lossy. Since the resistance of the cable is additive over its length, it appears as an upwards slope in trace’s impedance. A good cable will have a low slope and a lossy cable will have a high slope.



Figure 3

Copyright © 2001-2008 AEA Technology, Inc.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED


Antenna Testing
Antenna Isolation Testing
Cable Fault Locating
Cable Impedance Testing
Cable Measuring
Circuit Analysis
Circuit Gain/Loss
MRI Coil Testing
Network Analysis
Power Meter Reading
Spectrum Analysis
Vector Impedance Analysis
NMR Coil Testing/Tuning
Amateur
Aviation
CATV/Broadband
Government
Laboratory
Military
MRI or NMR Coil Testing
Railroad
RFID
Telco
Wireless (Broadcast)
Wireless (Land Mobile)
Access and use of this site is subject to the terms and conditions of our PRIVACY POLICY
Property of and Proprietary to AEA Technology, Inc.
Copyright © 2001-2008 AEA Technology, Inc.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Privacy Policy Terms of use