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Display impedance on Genesys' Smith Chart?

B

billcalley

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi Guys,

Something that has wasted hours of my time, and without any
success: I'm trying to make the Agilent Genesys linear simulator show
me the complex (rectangular) input impedance of a circuit, and display
that impedance (through a marker) on the Smith Chart, rather than just
as polar S11. (A Genesys Table display can do it easily...). The ZIN1
parameter does not even seem to work (I had thought it had, some years
ago). Surely there is a way! Anyone have any ideas on this??

Thank you!

-Bill

(PS: I was also trying to make the graph's marker text larger, but
that failure is just too painful to talk about).
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
billcalley said:
Hi Guys,

Something that has wasted hours of my time, and without any
success: I'm trying to make the Agilent Genesys linear simulator show
me the complex (rectangular) input impedance of a circuit, and display
that impedance (through a marker) on the Smith Chart, rather than just
as polar S11. (A Genesys Table display can do it easily...). The ZIN1
parameter does not even seem to work (I had thought it had, some years
ago). Surely there is a way! Anyone have any ideas on this??

Thank you!

-Bill

(PS: I was also trying to make the graph's marker text larger, but
that failure is just too painful to talk about).

No pun intended but that's one reason I use a real Smith Chart. Then
ones where they first have to fell a tree ...
 
B

billcalley

Jan 1, 1970
0
No pun intended but that's one reason I use a realSmith Chart. Then
ones where they first have to fell a tree ...

--
Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com/- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


True Joerg, but all of the software Smith charts I have ever used
allow this capability too. And for some reason, most people in this
newsgroup don't seem to be very familiar with Genesys, so I guess its
no REAL-IMAGINARY impedance's for me (at least on Eagleware's Smith
chart tool)!

Best,

-Bill
 
S

Simon S Aysdie

Jan 1, 1970
0
True Joerg, but all of the software Smith charts I have ever used
allow this capability too. And for some reason, most people in this
newsgroup don't seem to be very familiar with Genesys, so I guess its
no REAL-IMAGINARY impedance's for me (at least on Eagleware's Smith
chart tool)!


laughs. Maybe you need to import into Agilents free tool Appcad to do
that. Appcad does smith charts.

Seriously, there has to be a setting... doesn't there?
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
billcalley said:
True Joerg, but all of the software Smith charts I have ever used
allow this capability too. And for some reason, most people in this
newsgroup don't seem to be very familiar with Genesys, so I guess its
no REAL-IMAGINARY impedance's for me (at least on Eagleware's Smith
chart tool)!

Eagleware? Yeah, if you work in a huge business where several thousand
Dollars are considered chump change, or if your name is Rockefeller. My
only expense is about $1 for new compasses when traveling because the
TSA guys won't let them on board.
 
J

Joel Koltner

Jan 1, 1970
0
Joerg said:
Eagleware? Yeah, if you work in a huge business where several thousand
Dollars are considered chump change, or if your name is Rockefeller.

The "full" version of Genesys (now owned by Agilent -- they bought Eageware
something pushing a couple of years ago) is ~$20k. Certainly not cheap, but
very much within reach for any copmany with more than a handful of decently
paid engineers. (I mean, if you have a half dozen engineers these days, you
company must be burning something pushing a million bucks a year...)
My only expense is about $1 for new compasses when traveling because the TSA
guys won't let them on board.

I bought a decent compass/divider set while in college. It was probably
something like $20, but well worth it -- compared to the $1 compasses I was
able to draw much better circles.

---Joel
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
Joel said:
The "full" version of Genesys (now owned by Agilent -- they bought Eageware
something pushing a couple of years ago) is ~$20k. Certainly not cheap, but
very much within reach for any copmany with more than a handful of decently
paid engineers. (I mean, if you have a half dozen engineers these days, you
company must be burning something pushing a million bucks a year...)

But imagine how many parties $20k could throw for the guys :)

I still find it a bit on the expensive side. I have occasionally used
similar luxury suites at clients but afterwards never felt enticed to
plunk down the equivalent of a new car myself.

IMHO the gEDA world could become promising if the leaders in that field
would foray out of the "nerd corner" and into the Windows mainstream.

I bought a decent compass/divider set while in college. It was probably
something like $20, but well worth it -- compared to the $1 compasses I was
able to draw much better circles.

Oh, I've got a really nice set here but TSA so far considered those
weapons. So before leaving I scope out a Walmart on the route from the
airport to the client where they have the plastic versions for school kids.
 
S

Sarason

Jan 1, 1970
0
Joel said:
The "full" version of Genesys (now owned by Agilent -- they bought Eageware
something pushing a couple of years ago) is ~$20k. Certainly not cheap, but
very much within reach for any copmany with more than a handful of decently
paid engineers. (I mean, if you have a half dozen engineers these days, you
company must be burning something pushing a million bucks a year...)
The fully optioned version was/is about 20k$, but the base version was
1k$ a few years back.
There are other ways of getting around the price/performance issues with
the package, for instance Microwave Office used to cost considerably
less. Also all the synthesis tools in Eagleware usually have superior
tools with more functionallity from other vendors.

Andrew
 
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