On Tue, 11 Nov 2003 19:53:29 -0800, John Larkin
[snip]
The 'stuff' is perfectly flat for a perfect 50 ohm termination, spikes
up if the DUT is inductive, spikes down if capacitive, rings if
resonant. There is, in theory, enough info in the reflection to fully
characterize the impedance.
Both the pulse gen and the scope need to have ~~ 1 ns response to
resolve components close to 300 MHz. I have a Tek 11801 that has about
20 ps TDR resolution, and it's great for characterizing the impedance
of PCB traces.
I think there are some pretty good google-able TDR tutorials.
Interesting. So what does "TDR" stand for? time-domain something,
presumably?
Time Domain Reflectometer (or reflectometry). Think of a TDR as a
network analyzer that has had an inverse Fourier transform. ;-) TDRs
are a rather useful piece of equipment.
Well I was going to buy a VNA at some point soon. Does that obviate
the need for a TDR or is it advisable to have a TDR in addition,
anyway? I mean, is there something the TDR can do that a VNA can't?
If you plan to do RF (ie, sine waves, low amplitudes, Smith charts)
the VNA is much better. TDR data is harder to use for RF design, and
the step amplitudes are large so will mess up small-signal stuff like
semiconductors and amplifiers. TDR is great for analyzing PC boards
and transmission lines, and for poking around switching-type (time
domain) circuits.
TDR can directly plot, say, a graph of trace impedance versus distance
on a multilayer board. A dual-channel TDR can also be used as a very
fast pulse generator-oscilloscope combination.
John