First, my problem: I'm interesting in using a
ZX60-83LN amplifier to amplify the signal coming out of an 5~6GHz (WiFi) antenna. The amplifier specifies a output-power-at-1-dB-compression of 19.4 dBm. Now, I can only assume that this 19.4 dBm is measured as a total power across the amplifier's entire bandwidth. So I have the antenna set up in its final position, and I'm interested in measuring the power coming out of the antenna across the entire 5~6 GHz range. (Acknowledging of course that taking a single measurement doesn't predict everything the antenna might ever see, but let's ignore that for now.)
The only relevant equipment that I have is the lovely Signal Hound
BB60C Signal Analyzer, which has 27 MHz instantaneous bandwidth.
Now, WiFi is very spiky/bursty/packety, and that the amplifier very much cares whether spikes/bursts at (for example) 5.1GHz and 5.9GHz are simultaneous (because the powers should be summed if and
only if they're simultaneous), but the SA can only look at one band at a time and therefore has no idea if the packets line up or not. Therefore, my instinct is that it is, at least at a pedantic level, it's impossible for me to perform the measurement I want to perform using this SA.
I don't really have a particular question, but some discussion points:
- Am I right in my reasoning?
- What would be the most ideal tool for this situation?
- How would you proceed if you only had my SA?
- To what extent would it be considered acceptable to just assume that the different bands are operating in a completely independent and uncorrelated way? (Obviously this depends on the situation/industry/usecase, but still)