@gf: Thank you for this very useful explanation. So, the filter windows function is basically one of those trade-off choices like it is in computational image processing. Luckily, I bought two SMA port saver in my last adapter purchase, which, as I now realize, can also be used as signal delays. So I made some quick measurements, of my H155 cable with none, one and two port savers inserted between the calibration plane and my SMA to BNC adapter (I will repeat these measurements later with better warmed up equipment). I also did some comparisons between rectangular and Blackman window functions in Solver64 and METAS VNA Tools. The results were quite interesting.
I found that the measurements with one and two port savers in between generally tended to be more alike than the one without additional electrical delays in terms of absolute values for the cable impedance in the non-connectors region of the cable. As I see it, this suggests that working with an additional delay before going to BNC could be favorable in this case. However, this has to be taken with a grain of salt, because I noticed that I am finally in a region where repeatably tightening the SMA connectors properly makes a visible difference (thanks to joeqsmith for hammering that into my brain
). For this, I used my improvised 3D-printed torque wrench and ensured that I used a method, that let me get the same results over and over again, when loosening and re-tigthening the connector. So, I am kind of sure that I am at least sufficiently repeatable there without tightening to a specific calibrated torque value.
The second interesting finding was that using different windows (e.g. Rectangular vs. Blackman) made a large difference in terms of absolute impedance values in Solver64, but nearly no difference in the VNA Tools. In the VNA Tools I only observed less pronounced peaks, kind of like a low pass filter effect. In Solver 64 on the other hand, the mid section of the curve jumps by nearly 1.5 Ohms, which may hint at large integration differences ath the peak caused by the first BNC connection.
Solver64 electrical delay and filter function comparison with three electrical delays (no, one and two port savers inserted behind the calibration plane). The upper three curves are with with Rectangular window function, the lower three ones with Blackman:
The Blackman curves, and this is also true for the Hanning filter, show more pronounced ringing in the step response, which is kind of the opposite of what gf predicted.
One comparison of different filters in VNA Tools. I still have not found an easy way to get time domain loadable s1p files from Solver64 into VNA Tools, so only one curve here. The first image shows Rectangular and the second one Blackman:
Here, the curve with the Rectangular window shows, as predicted by gf, less ringing. Also the low pass components of the curve do not jump up and down, when switching filter windows, like they do in Solver64.