Motorola BT100 ユーザーズマニュアル

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Bench 
Testing 
4-3 
 
BT100 Installation and Operation Manual 
Perform steps 1 through 6 in Measuring Forward Gain above. 
Estimate the ambient temperature and find the required gain reserve by referring to 
Table 3-3. Reduce the gain at the highest frequency by the amount given in the table. 
 
Example: 
 
The ambient temperature is 70
°F. The table indicates that the required gain reserve is 4 dB. 
Reduce the gain by 4 dB. 
 
The operational gain is the sum of the measured gain after performing Step 2, plus all 
losses, such as power combiner, cable loss, equalizer, and cable simulator. 
 
The sweep response is essentially flat at this point. If the response exhibits tilt, the cable 
equalizer must be changed. Install a higher equalizer value if the gain is greater at the low 
frequencies; install the next lower equalizer value if the gain is less at the low-end 
frequencies. 
Measure the gain excursions from an average value within the bandpass. 
The result is the peak-to-valley flatness. Some improvement is possible by adjusting the 
flatness controls on the BDR board as described in Section 3, “Amplifier Setup,” Flatness 
Control. Figure 3-4 illustrates the location of these controls on the BDR. 
Testing Return Gain and Response 
After configuring the return path, you can test the return bandpass to ensure compliance with 
specifications. When testing the return path, remember that it is a flat response. Therefore, the 
cable simulator must remain in the test set-up and must remain set to the same cable 
equivalent as in the forward sweep test. This provides an approximate indication of the 
frequency response, which you can achieve in the field. 
To test for return gain and response: 
Reconnect the test equipment and switch the sweep input and sweep output leads of the 
BT100 under test to be opposite of the connection shown in Figure 4-1.  
Remove the 20 A fuse (F
1
) at the input port and replace the 20 A fuse (F
2
, F
3
, F
4
, or F
5
) at 
the output port (Figure 2-9) before you apply power. 
Re-adjust the test equipment to sweep from 4 MHz through the maximum return band 
frequency plus 10 MHz (Example – 50 MHz for S-split). 
 
The expected response is flat. Any tilt, which is due to the return equalizer, must average 
out to a flat response in a cascade of amplifiers. A slope adjustment is not available in the 
return bandpass. 
Measure the gain at the maximum return band frequency (example 40 MHz for S-split). 
The amplifier gain is the sum of: the measured gain, the insertion loss of the return cable 
equalizer at the maximum return band frequency, the insertion loss of the power combiner, 
any pads installed in either the input or output pad locations, plus the cable simulator loss 
at the maximum return band frequency. The amplifier gain must meet advertised 
specifications for the return path.