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Re: [TowerTalk] Antenna Analyzer Question

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Antenna Analyzer Question
From: Jeff Blaine <KeepWalking188@ac0c.com>
Date: Wed, 11 Feb 2026 12:45:00 -0600
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
Tom, you are absolutely correct.

The very very very cool part of a VNA-type device is the ability to move the "calibration point" to the end of a length of coax (using the OSL).  This frees you from having to connect the device right to the feedpoint.  Some SWR meters (like the Rig Expert devices) also support this capability.

73/jeff/ac0c
alpha-charlie-zero-charlie
www.ac0c.com

On 2/10/2026 8:55 PM, David Gilbert wrote:

That's every bit as technically correct  as anything I said ... it just requires that you cut a piece of coax to a particular length so it's not quite as versatile.

But just as valid.

Dave   AB7E



On 2/10/2026 6:59 PM, john@kk9a.com wrote:
While not as technically correct as the responses from AB7E, K9YC and W6RMK,
what I used to do back when I used Yagi's with hairpin matches was I
measured the impedance through a 1/2 wl multiple of coax.

John KK9A


[TowerTalk] Antenna Analyzer Question
Tom Hellem K0SN wrote

In order to make measurements  of impedance, etc on an antenna with any of the various analyzers on the market, one must connect the analyzer to the
antenna
with some length of coax. And unless the antenna being measured has a
feedpoint
impedance of 50 +/- j0, the impedance as seen by the analyzer is going to
vary
continuously all along the length of the coax, a phenomenon easily seen
with the use
of a program like TLW, etc.

Question is, unless I can attach the analyzer directly to the feedpoint,
how can I
obtain a reliably accurate measurement?

I just looked at the user manual for one of the popular analyzers on the
market.
It makes no mention of this whatsoever. And I don't remember it being in
any other manual I have seen in over 50 years of being in ham radio except
for one:
I have a manual for  a simple and inexpensive VNA built from a kit several
years ago, sold by a German company, that makes a big deal out of doing
what it calls an SOL compensation for
the coax and any other connectors used between the VNA and the antenna.
This
supposedly removes any of the impedance transforming effect of the test
setup from the
equation and allows for a precise measurement of the antenna under test.

So what gives? Has anybody here ever wondered about this?
Am I overthinking it or is there something to it?

Tom
K0SN


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