T
Tom Swift
Guest
John Larkin <jlarkin@highlandtechnology.com> wrote:
Your method is the shoddiest I have ever witnessed. You are guessing when
you compare the response to another probe that someone said has such and
such a bandwidth. You did not verify the claim, and you do not have the
equipment to do so. You are guessing all the way.
The step response may have a great deal of information. But that assumes
the system is linear, the stimulus is perfect and the response is
captured perfectly.
None are true in your setup. You cannot extract the bandwidth, group
delay, reflections, phase and amplitude ripple, frequency rolloff,
attenuation, or a dozen other things you need to know if you are to use
the probe in any serious work. You do not have the capability to do so.
Your claim is highly misleading. You are using a theoretical argument
that has no relation to what you are doing. That is highly disingenuous
and has no place in professional organization.
Instead of acknowledging there is a better source for a microwave
resistor for a resistive probe, you will ignore it and continue pushing
the Caddock as your solution. Just because that's the way you are.
I don't care. I am beyond wasting my time. Those who need to know
anything about what you say can easily find the solutions elsewhere.
And I highly recommend they do so.
On Tue, 14 Jul 2015 01:32:04 GMT, Tom Swift <spam@me.com> wrote:
Then I will know what I have to work with, instead of guessing.
In a linear system, the step response includes all the information
there is. No guessing required.
Your method is the shoddiest I have ever witnessed. You are guessing when
you compare the response to another probe that someone said has such and
such a bandwidth. You did not verify the claim, and you do not have the
equipment to do so. You are guessing all the way.
The step response may have a great deal of information. But that assumes
the system is linear, the stimulus is perfect and the response is
captured perfectly.
None are true in your setup. You cannot extract the bandwidth, group
delay, reflections, phase and amplitude ripple, frequency rolloff,
attenuation, or a dozen other things you need to know if you are to use
the probe in any serious work. You do not have the capability to do so.
Your claim is highly misleading. You are using a theoretical argument
that has no relation to what you are doing. That is highly disingenuous
and has no place in professional organization.
Instead of acknowledging there is a better source for a microwave
resistor for a resistive probe, you will ignore it and continue pushing
the Caddock as your solution. Just because that's the way you are.
I don't care. I am beyond wasting my time. Those who need to know
anything about what you say can easily find the solutions elsewhere.
And I highly recommend they do so.