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Calibration
Standards
The
quality
of
the
error-correction
is
limited
by
two
factors:
(1)
the
dierence
between
the
model
of
the
calibration
standards
and
the
actual
electrical
characteristics
of
those
standards
,
and
(2)
the
condition
of
the
calibration
standards
.
T
o
make
the
highest
quality
measurement
calibration,
follow
the
suggestions
below:
use
the
correct
standard
model
inspect
the
calibration
standards
clean
the
calibration
standards
gauge
the
calibration
standards
use
correct
connection
techniques
If
you
want
to
use
calibration
standards
other
than
the
default
sets
,
you
must
change
the
standard
model.
(Refer
to
\Modifying
Calibration
Kit
Standards"
located
later
in
this
chapter
.)
After
you
enter
the
mathematical
model
for
the
new
calibration
standards
,
the
analyzer
can
then
use
the
model
that
corresponds
to
the
new
standards
.
Compensating
for
the
Electrical
Delay
of
Calibration
Standards
Short
and
open
calibration
standards
in
the
3.5
mm,
2.4
mm,
and
2.92
mm
connector
types
have
a
certain
amount
of
electrical
delay
.
The
analyzer
compensates
for
this
delay
by
osetting
the
calibration
results
by
the
total
amount
of
electrical
delay
caused
by
the
calibration
standard
in
both
the
forward
and
reverse
direction.
As
a
result,
if
these
standards
are
measured
after
a
calibration,
they
will
not
appear
to
be
\perfect"
shorts
or
opens
.
This
is
an
indication
that
your
analyzer
is
working
properly
and
that
it
has
successfully
performed
a
calibration.
Note
If
you
enter
the
opposite
amount
of
electrical
delay
that
was
used
by
the
analyzer
during
calibration,
then
the
short
calibration
standard
will
appear
to
be
\perfect."
The
open
calibration
standard
has
additional
phase
shift
caused
by
fringing
capacitance
.
See
\Calibration
Considerations"
in
Chapter
6,
\Application
and
Operation
Concepts
."
Clarifying
Type-N
Connector
Sex
When
you
are
performing
error-correction
for
a
system
that
has
type-N
test
port
connectors
,
the
softkey
menus
label
the
sex
of
the
test
port
connector
-
not
the
calibration
standard
connector
.
F
or
example
,
the
label
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
SHORT
(F)
refers
to
the
short
that
will
be
connected
to
the
female
test
port.
When
to
Use
Interpolated
Error-Correction
Y
ou
may
want
to
use
interpolated
error-correction
when
you
choose
a
subset
of
a
frequency
range
that
you
already
corrected,
when
you
change
the
number
of
points
,
or
when
you
change
to
CW
.
This
feature
also
allows
you
to
change
the
parameters
in
a
2-port
correction,
such
as
IF
bandwidth,
power
,
or
sweep
time
.
The
analyzer
calculates
the
systematic
errors
from
the
errors
of
the
original
correction.
The
quality
of
the
interpolated
error-correction
depends
on
the
amount
of
phase
shift
and
amplitude
change
of
the
error
coecients
between
measurement
points
.
If
the
phase
shift
is
<180
per
ve
measurement
points
,
the
interpolated
error-correction
can
be
a
great
improvement
over
uncorrected
measurement.
T
o
activate
interpolated
measurement
correction,
press
4
CAL
5
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
INTERPOL
ON
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
CORRECTION
ON
.
When
interpolation
is
in
use
,
the
notation
C?
will
appear
on
the
analyzer
display
.
5-6
Optimizing
Measurement
Results
Summary of Contents for 8753D
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