On Oct 31, 2006, at 12:18 PM, FRANCIS CARCIA wrote:
I suspect you would be better off with a 300 watt amplifier running closer to class A with transformer feed back, Most RF transistors have internal emitter resistors to balance the parallel cells. Making feedback work over a wide frequency range takes real talent and good pc board layouts. gfz
zerobeat40 <zerobeat40@...> wrote:
Hey, I tried to put the NFB into a solid state amp once, being used as
a driver for commercial HF SSB. It was not so easy.
Assuming a pair of NPN transistors delivering 100 watts at 30MHz,
running from 13.8VDC, producting -30dBc IMD that we want to improve by
about 10dB. The correct value resistor is approx 0.2 ohms and it must
dissipate 15 watts, if the amp is to survive clumsy tuning into an
antenna tuner at full power. You could get away with a 5 watt device
if you insisted on only SSB (no CW or FM) and only into a matched
load. Smallest resistor I was able to find to meet this was a chip
style component, about 1/2 inch X 1/2 inch. It measured 5nH of
inductance. At 30MHz, XL=nearly one ohm. The stage gain at 30MHz was
reduced to approx 2dB, and the phase shift of this inductance reduced
the IMD benefits of the NFB to having no IMD reduction at all. At
1MHz, the solution worked very nicely - stage gain stabilized at 14dB,
and IMD measured about -42dBc (referenced to either of two incident
carriers)
If you could somehow create a 15 watt resistor that is 0.2 ohms and
under approx 0.2nH of inductance, then your proposed solution will work.
!. I would use 50v transistors.
Let us know when you find that resistor.
Z
--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:
tnx, Tony. Since adding RF-NFB to a transistor amplifier is as
simple as adding unbypassed R to the emitter leads, it puzzles me
why
Ham transceiver manufacturers don't wake up and start building
pristine radios.
Since the TS-830S uses essentially a copy of the KWM-2's RF
amplifier, it isn't surprising that the 830 has a reputation for
cleanliness.
cheerz
R L Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734
r@..., , rlm@..., www.somis.org