Technical Reference

Analog RF Fundamentals

Design, measure, and document analog stages so every signal leaving your shack is clean and efficient.

5

Club test instruments

0.5 dB

Max coax loss delta goal

Monthly

Hands-on workshops

Solid analog practices keep RF stages stable, protect finals, and prevent interference complaints. Whether you are tuning filters, biasing amplifiers, or characterizing a new antenna, start with a repeatable process and accurate measurements.

This page curates calculators, lab procedures, and documentation tips so you can move from simulation to soldering iron with confidence.

Signal Chain Essentials

Understand how each block behaves before you combine them.

  • ARRL Handbook chapters plus vendor app notes on low-loss inductors and capacitors.
  • ARRL technical resources summarize IMD mitigation, bias strategies, and drive-level testing.
  • Passive Components Cheat Sheet
    Club-created table covering Q, SRF, tolerance, and temperature coefficient for common RF parts.

Measurement Workflow

Consistency matters more than expensive gear.

  • Calibrate VNAs, spectrum analyzers, and power meters every time you change frequency range or cable length.
  • Record ambient temperature, test frequency, and connector types in your notebook so future measurements are comparable.
  • Use fixture de-embedding (SOLT / TRL) when characterizing filters or PCB traces above 100 MHz.
  • Photograph test setups—including attenuators and adapters—and store them with the measurement data file.

Instrumentation & Shared Gear

Take advantage of club equipment before buying your own.

  • Vector Network Analyzers
    NanoVNA V2 (portable) and Siglent SVA series (lab). Includes calibration kits and fixture boards.
  • Spectrum / Signal Sources
    Rigol DSA, tracking generators, and step attenuators for harmonic checks.
  • Power Handling Bench
    1 kW dry dummy load, thermocouples, airflow monitoring, and current shunts rated for 12 V and 48 V systems.

Compliance & Documentation

Prove that your project meets Part 97 and local RF-exposure requirements.

  • Use the FCC RF exposure calculator plus the ARRL worksheets for every permanent antenna site.
  • Archive schematics, Gerber files, and firmware in the club Git repository or your personal backup with version numbers.
  • Tag measurement files with revision numbers so other members can reproduce or peer-review your work.
  • Store before/after plots showing how mitigation efforts (ferrites, chokes, shielding) changed performance.

Need a second set of eyes?

Share schematics, plots, or notebook scans and a curator will review them before you order parts or climb a tower.

Email Technical Committee
Updated November 2025
Curator: Technical Committee