EE4life
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How can I measure the phase angle between two signals of the same frequency without an oscilloscope?
Thanks in advance
Thanks in advance
meBigGuy said:Here is a $15 part. You can buy a PC board for it also
http://www.minicircuits.com/pdfs/SYPD-1.pdf
http://www.minicircuits.com/pcb/WTB-12_P02.pdf
http://www.minicircuits.com/MCLStore/ModelPriceDisplay#
Baluncore said:Digitise the two signals with a PC sound card or cheap USB dual channel oscilloscope.
Then compute the FFTs of the two channels to get the phases.
If the signal has a complex waveform then there are many ways to process or correlate using FFTs that can determine the precise phase difference.
Baluncore said:IIRC the HP Vector Voltmeter used an RF local oscillator to synchronously convert the two channels down to 1 kHz. It then locked it's reference LO using the 1 kHz reference signal and made the phase comparison at 1 kHz.
EE4life said:Hmm, so I guess there is not cheap and/or easy solution. I guess I will need to sample the signals quickly and determine the phase digitally. I wish there were a plug and play phase angle to DC converter on the market.
Thank you for your comments and suggestions
Come on, with a name like EE4Life surely you shouldn't be averse to learning a bit of analog design. ;)EE4life said:Hmm, so I guess there is not cheap and/or easy solution. I guess I will need to sample the signals quickly and determine the phase digitally. I wish there were a plug and play phase angle to DC converter on the market.