VNAs (Vector Network Analyzers) are a critical piece of radio frequency test equipment. And unfortunately, standalone VNAs are extraordinarily expensive. New VNAs typically cost at least $10,000 - with additional costs for calibration kits (manual cal kits: >$1000, automatic ~$10,000). However, VNAs are not doing tasks fundamentally different than what your smartphone does: transmitting a specified frequency, and reading back the magnitude and phase of a return signal. Frustrated by the high cost of this equipment, I decided to make a VNA myself. There is no software to install, no drivers to add, not even an ON button: plug it in and you're ready to go.

The Chazwazza is a 400MHz-2.7 GHz VNA capable of measuring S11 and S21, with display formats VSWR, dB Magnitude, and Smith Charts. Calibration is done with an onboard integrated calibration unit, and all units ship with the required power cable, SMA female ports and a semi-rigid coaxial cable.

What Can You Do With A VNA?

Most importantly: you can design, tune and validate antennas in the frequency ranges including GPS, GSM/3G/LTE, 2.4GHz WIFI, BT, and more. VNAs enable you to measure the isolation between two antennas, and do RF impedance matching. Transmission line losses, filter responses and LNA gain can be measured as well.

Tech Specs

Frequency Range: 400 MHz - 2.7 GHz

Points Per Sweep: 231

Measurements: s11 and s21

Calibration: Integrated 2-Port Calibration

Formats: Smith Chart, VSWR, dB Magnitude

Markers: Up to 4

RF Connectors: SMA Female (2)

Port Impedance: 50 Ohms

Power Input: 5.5/2.1mm DC Jack Input 9V.

Battery Powered: Possible with input voltage between 6 and 11 Volts (not included).

Display: 480 by 320 Pixels, 252k color 3.5” TFT LCD display

Coaxial Cable: 12" SMA male to SMA male Semi-rigid cable .086"

Size: 126.6mm * 99mm * 25.2mm [4.98 * 3.9 * 0.99 inches]

Weight: ~1 pound.

Project History

This project didn't come together without a lot of iteration and struggle. The origins of the project go back to early 2016 when I attempted a scalar network analyzer with discrete components:

Discrete Component Scalar Analyzer

In the summer of 2016 I made a development board connected to an STM32F4 discovery board:

Development Board

After the development board I drilled down on the RF sections and studied the directional couplers:

Directional Couplers Board

In November of 2016, the first standalone prototype was developed:

Proto1

Proto2 was the first form factor development board, developed in February 2017:

Proto2

March 2017 led to EVT1, with a larger display and support for S21 measurements:

EVT1

Finally EVT2 was produced, with minor hardware bug fixes from EVT1, and we have the current design. For an in-depth discussion of the development (when the project was not yet ready), see this talk by Pete at the Hardware Developers Didactic Galactic in San Francisco.

Where’s the Funding Goal Come From?

The funding raised will be used to produce a batch of fully assembled 100 VNAs. This cost includes developing injection molding tools for the enclosure, which enable cost-effective volume production of plastic parts. We will do a final PCB iteration, including making 100 PCBs along with purchasing/populating the boards with the components. We need to order the production quantities of the displays, screws, power cables, coaxial cables, etc. Then we're off to the last step: final assembly, test and packout (FATP).

How Accurate Is the VNA?

No instrument is perfect. But rather than make long-winded statements with specs, let's compare the Chazwazza results with an extraordinarily expensive Agilent VNA (which is also imperfect).

Here is a 3dB attenuator swept from 400-2700MHz, both axis from 0 to -18 dB:

A 2.4GHz antenna is compared next:

The s11 results for a dual band cellular antenna (824-960MHz & 1710-2170MHz) is shown next:

Let's move on to S21. Here is the isolation between two antennas sharing a PCB, again measured in dB Magnitude:

Finally - this is a Vector Network Analyzer after all, where's the phase? For that I present Smith Chart comparisons for the same cellular antenna above, over two frequency ranges. Pardon the lack of interpolation between points, (I have yet to implemented that):

The same antenna's Smith Chart for the highband is now shown:

There you have it - can you design and tune antennas and RF systems with this product? Absolutely. There is some measurement noise that I'm working on filtering out with software, but overall the data is very accurate.

What type of OS does this run?

There is nothing to install: plug it in and go. This product uses a simple user interface that can be navigated via Next/Previous buttons, along with Enter to select, Increment/Decrement to adjust values, and Escape to enter or exit the menu from the measurement mode.

Input Menu Screen

Up to four frequency markers can be selected. Currently the number of points per sweep is fixed at 231. I hope to add support for open circuit port extensions and memory traces, but this is not currently implemented.

Who’s Behind this Project

Peter Bevelacqua is a longtime professional antenna design engineer, having designed antennas for major companies including Boeing, Apple, and Google. He has many antenna related patents, a Ph.D. in antenna engineering and is the author of antenna-theory.com.

This Chazwazza is designed and manufactured in Silicon Valley, USA.