OK, time for some feedback. My liteVNA64 finally arrived yesterday and I had some time for trying to fiddle out how to make it work.
Getting the Solver64 software to be able to communicate with the device via any COM port was a four hour nightmare. Manually installing the correct CDC driver was easy, but some parts of the NI-VISA or Labview components that are responsible for serial communication repeatedly refused to install right on all three machines, I tried this on. I finally got it working by beating the heck out of some stubborn DLLs.
Then I tried to find a suitable measurement setup for the liteVNA, the supplied calibration kit and the four el-cheapo BNC to SMA adapters. Good thing, I ordered those. I put the supplied short SMA cables on the liteVNA and tried to connect everything else there. The calibration was performed with the supplied SMA-F to SMA-F adapter between the SMA cables and the cheap calibration standards. For cable test measurements, I left the adapter in place and connected an SMA-M to BNC-F adapter to attach the BNC cable as the DUT. At it's end, I used a BNC-F to SMA-F adapter to connect the calibration kit load as a 50Ω termination.
Measurement setup:
Then I played with calibrations for different start and stop frequencies, with connecting different cables, repeatability and SMA connectors. Insight number one: Some of my equipment and my RF measurement skills are crap. Improving the latter is the key to identify how to improve the first.
For testing, I used three self made RG58-CU cables, made from the same cable roll using Telegärtner BNC connectors. Two of the cables are of similar length of about little more than a meter and the third one is about 1.5 meters. I measured all three cables in the ranges of 50k-100M, 50k-3G and 50k-6.3G. I am still not sure, which ranges would be the best to use here. At least the measurements were somewhat consistent.
50k-100M:
50k-3G:
50k-6.3G:
Could the large spikes at the beginning and the end of the traces be an indicator of the really bad quality of my SMA to BNC adapters or is this just an expected effect of a BNC connection?
Regarding the repeatability, I redid some measurements after disconnecting and reattaching the DUT cable from everything. I also repeated some tests with just a redone calibration. I discovered that I had to tighten the SMA connectors with quite a bit of force by hand, to get some repeatability. Just disconnecting and reconnecting the cable sometimes lead to impedance differences of multiple ohms with the whole impedance curve shifted up or down(see image). I am still not sure what caused this. If, for example I had not tightened the double SMA-F adapter at the end of the SMA cable sufficiently or it came loose because of reattaching the DUT, I would have expected to see some kind of local impedance spike, but not a complete up- or down shift of the whole curve. Similarly for the experiments with three redone calibrations, I had some measurements with the same effect while other measurements were very close to each other. Then again, there might have been SMA connection issues on some calibrations.
Reconnection repeatability:
Recalibration repeatability:
If I am correct, this maybe hints at using a 0.5Nm torque wrench to tighten the brass SMA connectors. Someone told me, it should be quite difficult to over-tighten an SMA connector by screwing it on by hand without any tools. So maybe I can get around investing over 350€ in a good quality SMA torque wrench by just tightening the connectors very hard without using any force amplifying tools?
I will do some further testing in the next few days.