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How much voltage would I loose on 5v linear power supply 5m cable to my LNA?

To work this out properly we need one key missing detail: the cable conductor size (wire gauge or cross-section) and ideally the current drawn by the LNA.

That said, I can give you realistic ranges that usually apply to LNAs, so you can see whether you’re in trouble or not.


Typical LNA assumptions (reasonable defaults)

Most radio astronomy LNAs draw:

  • Current: 50–200 mA
  • Supply: 5 V DC
  • Cable: two-core copper (power out + ground return)

Voltage drop depends on round-trip resistance, so the effective length is 10 m (5 m out + 5 m back).


Voltage drop examples

1️⃣ Thin cable (≈ 24 AWG, ~0.084 Ω/m)

Common in USB leads or cheap hook-up wire.

  • Resistance:
    0.084 Ω/m × 10 m = 0.84 Ω
  • Voltage drop:
    • 100 mA → 0.084 V
    • 200 mA → 0.168 V

✅ Usually OK
⚠️ Marginal if the LNA really needs a clean 5.0 V


2️⃣ Medium cable (≈ 22 AWG, ~0.053 Ω/m)

Better-quality power cable.

  • Resistance:
    0.053 Ω/m × 10 m = 0.53 Ω
  • Voltage drop:
    • 100 mA → 0.053 V
    • 200 mA → 0.106 V

✅ Very safe for most LNAs


3️⃣ Very thin cable (≈ 28 AWG, ~0.22 Ω/m)

Found in cheap USB leads.

  • Resistance:
    0.22 Ω/m × 10 m = 2.2 Ω
  • Voltage drop:
    • 100 mA → 0.22 V
    • 200 mA → 0.44 V

⚠️ This can cause gain loss or instability in LNAs


Practical radio-astronomy advice

For LNAs (especially at 1420 MHz):

  • Keep drop < 0.1 V if possible
  • Use 22 AWG or thicker
  • Or send 9–12 V and regulate locally at the LNA
  • Or use bias-T if the LNA supports it

Quick rule of thumb

If your cable is:

  • USB-thin → expect 0.2–0.4 V loss
  • Decent power wire → expect <0.1 V loss

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