Unless you have the RF clea area as mention below it is not worth to buy the antennas. You should have a B-Field probe. These are good for sniffing out hot-spots on your board. Make a note of the radio stations in your area, because I had an engieer in my group spend 1/2 day trying to figure out what was causing a big spike at 94.7Mhz, he didn't realize it until I asked which radio station was playing in the lab. If your budget allows it, take your board/product to a lab for a pre-scan. I think that you will get more bang for buck versus buying antennas and creating a RF clean work area. > -----Original Message----- > From: embeddedjanitor [mailto:manningc2@...] > Sent: Sunday, February 20, 2005 5:33 PM > To: lpc2000@yahoogroups.com > Subject: [lpc2000] Re: EMI Testing > > > > --- In lpc2000@yahoogroups.com, "fl429" <fl429@y...> wrote: > > > > I know this may not be the right group for this question. But it > does > > seems to have the right crowd, right ? > > > > We have a HP8563E Spectrum Analyzer. I want to use it to do > some in- > > house preliminary EMI compliance test. This would help us > in the right > > direction to correct some possible EMI problems. > > > > What kind of antenna and other must-have gears do I need ? > Any advice > > ? > > > > Thanks > > > > Lei > > This is not the sort of thing you should expect to answer on > a group like this. > > You'll need various antennas and probes depending on what > you're trying to measure. > > You need a RF-clean work area for some testing. > > If you're unsure (which it seems you are - from reading your > post), I suggest looking up a test place in the yellow pages. > > > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > > > > > >
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RE: [lpc2000] Re: EMI Testing
2005-02-21 by Joe Hlebasko
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