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Re: 4 Tube 811 Amplifier.
la3pna
I have done some modifications to the shematic, so i have uploaded an
revided shematic. I can't see the reason for floating the B-, to mesure the current i would just add an 0.1 ohm resistor between the PSU's - tab and ground. It sould be easy to mesure the current over that? or is it somting I have missed? I also have to order an transformer, since there are just 2 producers of small transformers, i would have to order an 600V and use an voltage doubler. I could get an 700VA transformer realy cheap, but is it enoug? I've read that SSB only has an dutty of about 20%. 73 de Thomas. --- In ham_amplifiers@..., Tony King - W4ZT <w4zt-060920@...> wrote: transition of the contacts the cathode will rise to near full anode potential andwhen you make contact with your bias circuit, you are hitting it with a very |
Re: Calculating Grid dissipation revisted
FRANCIS CARCIA
The best way to measure a transformer gut temp is measure the winding resistance cold then hot and determine the real temperature rise by the copper constant. I think it is about .4%/degreeC. wa1gfz
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R L Measures wrote:
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Re: Transformers on Wiki again...
craxd
All,
I hate to say that some dumb a$$ deleted almost everything I had written except some corrections about the windings. I'd about bet they were the one who wrote the screwed up stuff I had to correct. The guy who edited it wrote he thought only 5-6 people might find it helpful. Now, the page is about worthless but just to describe what a transformer is. All the useful formulae are now gone. It's a shame I didn't save it all as there was about 16 hours work in that. I did leave the a$$hole a scaving responce and asked a question wanting to know if they want people to learn or not. I think most in the discussion are audiophiles who don't know one end from the other. Best, Will --- In ham_amplifiers@..., "craxd" <craxd1@...> wrote: I had to correct the one on Gilberts too. They're still may be more,and if any of you were to catch these, please let me know. |
Re: Calculating Grid dissipation revisted
On Sep 26, 2006, at 5:02 PM, pentalab wrote:
--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:During an ahhhhhhhh, I see about 1/3 of A0 anode current. If one transmits half the time, that's a duty-cycle of 1/6.different than RTTY. It's just a matter of execution.### see above.### Average plate current on SSB is about 1/2 that of the... closer to 1/3 Since weThat would work. With a C-filter, for every ampere indicated, expect 10 amperes peak. or perhaps measuring the peak v across the 240vSure, but with the required size caps for a FWD, the % regulation is pretty much the same. That 50 ohm glitch R we have in the B+ doesn't help... which is not noticeable at the Rx end. Originally, the Plywood Box amplifier stupidly had a 25w glitch resistor -- most definitely a blunderous mistake. Later..... Jim VE7RFR L MEASURES, AG6K. 805-386-3734 r@... |
Transformers on Wiki again...
craxd
All,
I finally did finish all I was going to do on Wikipedia about power transformers. I found I also had to edit a few stubs and others. The definition of Oersted was completely screwed and they had it tagged for a re-write which I did the complete thing, and it's now correct. I had to correct the one on Gilberts too. They're still may be more, and if any of you were to catch these, please let me know. I hope any who use this will find it helpful as it now has the most info on the web about them. I do still hope a few here might add to the RF transformer parts. Anyone can edit these by the way, and you don't have to join anything. Thanks, Will |
Re: plate xfmrs... hypersil.. Dahl... etc.
craxd
Jim,
I forgot to add, the calculations about voltage arcing I'm thinking of are for only up to say 3 kVA in size. When you get on up in size, the volts per turn, and per layer can raise due to the turns per volt dropping. After 3 kVA, I'm not sure what they would equal up to be. What I generally figure on these is about 2500 Vac at 3 kVA max. That will give a 3500 Vdc OCV from a cap input. Now you take a big one like your speaking of with 6 kV and the size it is in kVA, the volts per turn, and per layer could be high. A big transformer could get up to like 1/4 turn per volt or more, and at say 6000 Vac, there would be 4 or more volts per turn. What the worry would be is arcing between the layers of turns. At say 250 turns, you'd have 1000 volts per layer. Of course then you thicken up the paper between layers and the wire insulation. I think you can see where this is all going, the bigger in size in kVA with HV, the worse off you are. Dahl could have been telling you about them instead of smaller ones like 3 kVA and under. Best, Will --- In ham_amplifiers@..., "craxd" <craxd1@...> wrote: quote### someone listed on 'amp's.. think it was Johm Lyles... about Usefrom 'magcapengineering' xfmrs.... about $100.00 less than the Dahl'sa large C input filter... and the V reg sucked... the high peak werewill do about 4 x their rating on ssb.No, the one in mention was Hal Mandel W4HBM. He had Dahl design a aknown as 'high reactance types'... all had center taps... and allNo, they're not Hammond, they're a large company named MCI that cold rolled, grain oriented steel with a silicon content of around3- 1/2%. Westinghouse actually sold out years ago on the steel used inhis ustandard 45-65-127-253-440 lb cores.... and specify the sec taps corewant... they always turn out great. The primarys are all woundHow can they select so many voltages for different amps with one when the whole design considers the incoming / outgoing voltages andspoke, that Dahl was taking a few cores and trying to make them work in amake it fit. That's not good engineering practice, and the efficiencywebsite. There's probably 1000+ different stock C-core sizes available frompower basedfactor... and 10% for core losses. His CCS ratings are ..on a 50 deg C temp rise over ambient. I have seen several. runalmost all vault transformers where the temp rise spec is sky withem so hot is beyond me. Power co's do the same thing pole pigs... they run em hot. Ever wonder how a 50 KVA xfmr heatcan run 16 x homes...all with "200 A" service ?? There is ifto the outside case [I suspect the cases are aluminium..neverA transformer running into a full wave bridge, with capacitor input, regulators are used afterwards. That has a lot to do withtransformer failures I think when one orders them. See Hammond and Thordarsonless for SSB only operation as the book "Reference Data for RadioOnce a pole pig is out of the oil, it's kva rating drops drastically. Theto 17 kilogaiis flux density if a high-temp wire is used. Though thego up. If one used formvar or polyimide coated wire at thosekva thereinput ??? U need loads of square/rectangular wire to windWhen I say 3 kVA or 1.5 kVA input, I mean the power of the amps for. I will simply supply a 3 kVA transformer. The customer needs tofor certain sizes. Square wire will arc over too if the insulation usedeither he had over 1kv per layer at the least, or between turns, and that10 layers or more, but at 10 layers, that's 500 volts per layer. Idoubt one could get 500 turns in a layer, most likely 20 layers or moredidn't pay for the option....and stored em in damp locations... had emI agree, if they're going to be where it's damp, it should be dunked |
Re: plate xfmrs... hypersil.. Dahl... etc.
craxd
### someone listed on 'amp's.. think it was Johm Lyles... aboutNo, the one in mention was Hal Mandel W4HBM. He had Dahl design a transformer for him, and I can't remember if it was a anode or a heater, but in two tries, Dahl got it wrong, both transformers went poof for the rated load. I'm not sure, but afterwards, He got his money back, and I think had the same transformer company in Kentucky wind one that worked perfectly right from the box. The windings from Dahl were wound with too small a wire both times if I recall. I remember helping him troubleshoot it on amps, and the first thing I said was the transformer wasn't right, and he found that the case after checking it. ### Hope it's not Hammond. Hammond makes superb stuff....No, they're not Hammond, they're a large company named MCI that specializes in all types. Hipersil is only a trademark held by Westinghouse which means high permeability silicon steel. Hipersil's equivelants are M-6 in EI cores, Hypertran, and Microsil. Microsil is used by Magnetic Metals. Hypertran is Armco Steels (AK Steel) brand name for the steel. It is a cold rolled, grain oriented steel with a silicon content of around 3- 1/2%. Westinghouse actually sold out years ago on the steel used in the manufacturer. One can build an EI core with M-6 that weighs just 15% more than a C-core. The only savings of the C-core would be the rounded over corners in weight. How can they select so many voltages for different amps with one core when the whole design considers the incoming / outgoing voltages and currents to figure the core size? My guess was, when Hal and I spoke, that Dahl was taking a few cores and trying to make them work in a bunch of other designs. You can end up finding out that after it's started, the size wire you wan't wont fit in the window, or there's not enough room for the number of turns, and then drop it down to make it fit. That's not good engineering practice, and the efficiency wouldn't be good over it. I noticed myself that Dahl only uses a few sizes of C-cores, and used the same ones in many different amp-brand replacements. They're all listed in his Ham catalog on their website. There's probably 1000+ different stock C-core sizes available from Magnetic Metals. ### Primary KVA = DC input x 1.22 That allows 11% for powerA transformer running into a full wave bridge, with capacitor input, needs about 1.6 to 1.8 times more rms current than the DC supply current for the load. Most HV supplies require about 1.6 as 1.8 is if regulators are used afterwards. That has a lot to do with transformer failures I think when one orders them. See Hammond and Thordarson transformer engineering portions of their websites, and a number of others that show the same formulas. You can get by with a little less for SSB only operation as the book "Reference Data for Radio Engineers" gives 1.45 times the DC current. Ref: These days, they're using met-glass which has a high perm, with a higher flux density than Hipersil, plus they're immersed in oil. Once a pole pig is out of the oil, it's kva rating drops drastically. The heat being carried away is the reason why they can be ran where they're at. Without oil, at the same load, the wire would cook. Some air cooled types can be pretty ran hot, at about 115 deg C, and up to 17 kilogaiis flux density if a high-temp wire is used. Though the magnetizing current rises rapidly above 15 kg and the losses really go up. If one used formvar or polyimide coated wire at those temperatures, the transformer would smoke in no time. When I say 3 kVA or 1.5 kVA input, I mean the power of the amps there for. I will simply supply a 3 kVA transformer. The customer needs to figure the size they need by the math, or have me to do it for them. Naw, round wire has been used for years and years with no problems. It's more like he uses square because that's all he wants to stock for certain sizes. Square wire will arc over too if the insulation used isn't correct. The insulation thickness in mils, and type is what determines if it will arc between turns, but here's the kicker, there's no where near the full voltage between turns, nor between layers. Matter of fact, there's no where near the voltage between turns or the layers to puncture standard insulation. If it was, either he had over 1kv per layer at the least, or between turns, and that just simply can't be the case. At one tun per volt, if we had 5000V, and 5000 turns, that's 1 volt per turn. We'd probably have at least 10 layers or more, but at 10 layers, that's 500 volts per layer. I doubt one could get 500 turns in a layer, most likely 20 layers or more total. The thing is, the larger the core, the turns per volt drops, and at 1 turn per volt, that equals about 1 kVA. If he said that the wires insulation has to match the full output voltage, he needs some more schooling, or he's yanking your chain. I agree, if they're going to be where it's damp, it should be dunked in varnish. Actually, the only ones I never did varnish was the ones in school as they had to be re-wound again by another student. I'd be interested in these other xfmr builder's specs.Ten-Tecs' supplier is; MCI Limited: Others; Galaxy Transformer: and Ed Dennis, Heritage Transformer: Heritage Transformer Co, Inc. 13483 Litchfield Rd. Eastview, KY 42732. 270-862-9877. e-mail hertiran@... I don't have a URL for them anymore, and a search didn't show a website. They used to have one, maybe someone else knows it.
Best, Will |
Re: Calculating Grid dissipation revisted
pentalab
--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:
different than RTTY. ### Dream On.... unless you chopped all the audio off below 350 hz..... or the plate current meter ballistics are out to lunch. ### see above.### Average plate current on SSB is about 1/2 that of the... closer to 1/3 [and internal wiring] is not big enough !Average power output [not pep] is onlyResin potting helps dissipate heat from deep in the core. box. It did 14k out pep and the wire was #4 Cu. ### #4 is too puny...esp 100' away. Heck that amounts to a 200' loop !! 4 ga CU won't handle 400+ A on peaks... without a big v drop.... esp with 200' of loop resistance.... never mind ur small ga aluminium drop wires coming into the house.. on top of that. #### The next question is/was gonna be.... how was ur HV regulation... with a dead cxr ???? [static] and also on ssb [dynamic] ??? You can't even run a dead cxr.... with just your 40 A breaker. You need a bare minimum of a 100 A breaker. the neighbor's porch-light blinked.A 1-milliohm resistor in series with a calibrated oscilloscope to #### A 1 milliohm resistor... inserted in one leg of the 240 v line that will handle 400 + A is gonna be a trick. Since we know the exact length of the cable.... and it's exact dc resistance... perhaps measuring the V drop end to end will work?? .... or perhaps measuring the peak v across the 240v line.... using the peak max/min function on a fluke 87 [1 msec snap shots] .... or my scope might work... and trigger off the 'lows' in the acv ?? ### A fwb gives better reg than a doubler... for the same size caps. That 50 ohm glitch R we have in the B+ doesn't help matter's any.... I lose 150 vdc right there. Later..... Jim VE7RF |
Re: 4 Tube 811 Amplifier.
Tony King - W4ZT
Hello Thomas,
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A couple of suggestions for your amplifier... First, I would float the B- to make metering of plate and grid current readily available to you. It takes no more than two resistors and a few diodes to protect the metering to make this big improvement. Second, I would suggest that you do not do T/R keying of the bias the way that is shown on your schematic. That method is similar to the Clipperton L and a few others. The flaw is that during the transition of the contacts the cathode will rise to near full anode potential and when you make contact with your bias circuit, you are hitting it with a very high voltage at that moment. A simple cure for it without changing the circuit entirely, and this applies to the Clipperton L as well, is to place a jumper across the wiper and the normally closed contact of the keying relay. That will keep the cutoff resistor in the circuit all the time and prevent the cathode voltage from soaring. I would also place a fuse in series with your bias circuit rated at just over your maximum expected plate current. Also, a Metal Oxide Varistor or an NE-2 neon bulb in parallel with the bias circuit will help protect it against transient voltages. You may want to increase the value of the cutoff resistor to about 20K to minimize the current in standby. 73, Tony W4ZT la3pna wrote: Hi group. |
Re: plate xfmrs... hypersil.. Dahl... etc.
On Sep 26, 2006, at 1:15 PM, pentalab wrote:
--- In ham_amplifiers@..., "craxd" <craxd1@...> wrote:A Dahl 4500va-rated transformer will do 14k RF out pep.them too!For the price they charge for the suckers, they out to gold plateother very good companies who make some gem dandy transformers, andDon't be blinded by all the Dahl-Hipersil hoopla, there's a few R L MEASURES, AG6K. 805-386-3734 r@... |
Re: 4 Tube 811 Amplifier.
Thomas S. Knutsen
Yeah, that's correct.
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If you compare them then you would see that I have copyed part's of it. I think that the Ameritron amp. is running the tubes a bit to hard. An other thing i have done is that i have added an adjustabile bias and not an string of diodes like ameritron has done. 73 de Thomas tir, 26,.09.2006 kl. 17.09 -0400, skrev KR4DA: Very good English --
Best Regards/MVH Thomas S Knutsen LA3PNA |
Re: Calculating Grid dissipation revisted
On Sep 26, 2006, at 1:49 PM, pentalab wrote:
--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:SSB has a duty cycle of less than 20%, so it's quite different than RTTY.I increases.Not so amazing for those who realize that Mu goes down as anode- ... closer to 1/3 Average power output [not pep] is onlyResin potting helps dissipate heat from deep in the core. I have loads of air blown across it anyway.... andThe Plywood Box amplifier was 100' from the breaker box. It did 14k out pep and the wire was #4 Cu. Either 3 x 000 CU or just A 1-milliohm resistor in series with a calibrated oscilloscope to measure the V-drop across it. The Plywood Box drew so much peak current that the 240v wires could be heard vibrating in the attic when I used a 30pps pulser to tune the sucker up. Also, at night, the neighbor's porch-light blinked. Agreed, Jim, and the educational fun value is zero. I put several L4B's nose toR L MEASURES, AG6K. 805-386-3734 r@... |
Re: 4 Tube 811 Amplifier.
Steven Grant
You dont need matched tubes -- just put some resistance in the cathodes
and they self match -- rich knows more about how to get the right values
of resistance -- im still learning
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Steven Grant W4IIV At 04:54 PM 9/26/2006, la3pna wrote: Hi group. |
Re: 4 Tube 811 Amplifier.
KR4DA
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýVery good EnglishAnyway I had a Ameratron (sp) AL 811H This was a 4 tube 811 amp. Try researching it for CKT diagrams and? ideas. I think the schematic is on the Ameratron web page. la3pna wrote:
-- de KR4DA Bob Middleburg, FL HK0/KR4DA J79DA FG/KR4DA |
4 Tube 811 Amplifier.
la3pna
Hi group.
I'm Thomas, La3PNA and I'm in the progress of starting to build an HF amplifier with 4 811A tubes. I'm gone to use 4 of them because, I got the tubes, sockets and Plate caps for 4. I have drawn an shematic that can be found in the folder "LA3PNA 811 amplifier" in the Files section. I have drawn it as an one band unit, mostly since the rotary switches in Eagle are stupid drawn, I would like to make it work at all nine HF bands, from 160M to 10M. I wrote an e-mail to R L MEASURES and got an nice answer on some of my questions. He recomended to use 5 of 811, but i think that it is a bit hard to get 5 matched tubes? I have found out that one 811 tube has an impedance of 300 ohm's so 4 of them should give an inpedance of 75 ohms. Is this correct? found the data in an old ARRL handbook, on an article on an one tube amp. Hope that some of you have time to take an look at my design and please let me know if there is any errors. 73 de Thomas LA3PNA PS: sorry for my bad English. |
Re: Calculating Grid dissipation revisted
pentalab
--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:
I increases.Not so amazing for those who realize that Mu goes down as anode- ### agreed. ### Those 253 lb Dahl's are a bargain..... on SSB because one of his 68-pounders will do 15k out. As I see it, a 253-pounder is more than enough for a8910/4cx15,000J. ### I find that hard to believe !... but I may well be wrong. With 6800 Vdc @ 3A = 20.4 Kw dc input. Primary KVA = 20.4 x 1.22 = 24.88 Kva. ### A Dahl 253 lb'er has a 5200/5400 sec.... rated at just 3 A CCS. [ Sec = 16 KVA CCS.... primary = 17.6kva ] ### So we are running it on SSB at aprx 24.88 /17.6 = 1.41 or 41 % over it's rating.... on ssb. So far so good. ### Average plate current on SSB is about 1/2 that of the dead cxr condition. Average power output [not pep] is only aprx 1/5 th the pep output of the amp. ### Next step is... we will try and meausre the heat on the outer core with a Fluke 62 mini IR thermometer. Of course... the heat deep inside the core will always be way more. I have loads of air blown across it anyway.... and reg is not too bad. ### I'm convinced 2 ga wire from main panel to HV supply [and internal wiring] is not big enough ! Either 3 x 000 CU or just locating the HV supply next to the main 200 A panel would be the ticket... then longer runs of DC HV to the RF deck. ### What's a fairly precise way to measure peak AC current [under load] from the 200 A main panel ???? ### spending $7.5 K to $10 k on a new Alpha /Acom is an even greater waste of greenbacks imo. I put several L4B's nose to tail... on different bands! [the L4b's will handle 2kw on bypass.. with flat bypss swr]. Heck I could afford to blow 1/2 of em up... and still have a few left over. A pair of sb-220's would also work... just tune em up on diff bands...... plus u got a back up amp... if one blows up.... or u got one of em offline.. in the shop.. being modified. Jim VE7RF
|
New file uploaded to ham_amplifiers
Hello,
This email message is a notification to let you know that a file has been uploaded to the Files area of the ham_amplifiers group. File : /LA3PNA 811 Amplifier/811.jpg Uploaded by : la3pna <snknutse@...> Description : First shematic. You can access this file at the URL: To learn more about file sharing for your group, please visit: Regards, la3pna <snknutse@...> |
Re: plate xfmrs... hypersil.. Dahl... etc.
pentalab
--- In ham_amplifiers@..., "craxd" <craxd1@...> wrote:
them too!For the price they charge for the suckers, they out to gold plate other very good companies who make some gem dandy transformers, andDon't be blinded by all the Dahl-Hipersil hoopla, there's a few for a way better price. I'll dig up a couple of address for you later today. ### someone listed on 'amp's.. think it was Johm Lyles... about 15 x diff xfmr makers in the USA. Someone got a cheap quote from 'magcapengineering' xfmrs.... about $100.00 less than the Dahl.... then we he got it.... found that the DC secondary resistance was 65 ohms !! [ 5-10 ohms is more like it.] Use a large C input filter... and the V reg sucked... the high peak currents will cook the cheaper xfmr's. Rich claims the Dahl's will do about 4 x their rating on ssb. One in Canada who makes the ones for Ten-Tec.### Hope it's not Hammond. Hammond makes superb stuff.... however.. they don't have a clue as to how to build Hypersil anything... just standard EI stuff. Hammomnd thinks the way to build a plate xfmr is to center tap it. All their plate xfmrs were known as 'high reactance types'... all had center taps... and all were made for tube rectifiers... and choke input. ## Hammond does make superb EI custom fil xfmrs. Also their 7.5v-21 A and 5v-30A are dirt cheap. [$40.00 US funds]... run barely luke warm... but only come with 115 V primarys. There's one in Kentucky, that does a really good job, but I can't remember the name without looking it up. Another is Galaxy Transformer who makes some big ones for a builder down in Florida. Dahl on a custom transformer. It made me wonder who they had there designing them.### Dahl and some engineers do it themselves. IF u just take his standard 45-65-127-253-440 lb cores.... and specify the sec taps u want... they always turn out great. The primarys are all wound the same with the +10 0 -10.... 208....240 set up. ### Primary KVA = DC input x 1.22 That allows 11% for power factor... and 10% for core losses. His CCS ratings are based on a 50 deg C temp rise over ambient. I have seen several... almost all vault transformers where the temp rise spec is sky high... typ as much as 155 deg C.[over ambient] Why they run em so hot is beyond me. Power co's do the same thing with pole pigs... they run em hot. Ever wonder how a 50 KVA xfmr can run 16 x homes...all with "200 A" service ?? There is hardly any oil in em either.... the oil is just to transfer heat to the outside case [I suspect the cases are aluminium..never seen rust on em]... and keep moisture out during storage. (1.5 kVA input) for a few friends. I just got an e-mail back from the core supplier today. ### How do u propose to get 3 kva output.... with only 1.5 kva input ??? U need loads of square/rectangular wire to wind em.... no round wire is used in any dahl's...other wise u end up with too many air gaps between turns....and more chance of corona. ### Back in the 'old days' pumping dahl's with silicone varnish glop was an option.... and several of the ones that didn't pay for the option....and stored em in damp locations... had em short out, etc. Corona is bad news. I'd be interested in these other xfmr builder's specs. Later......Jim VE7RF |
Re: Tubing/strap for RF
pentalab
--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:
allWith a Q of only 8, a Pi-network's transformation ratio isn'tRich Sez... Jim A Q of 15 on 10m is quite common. that great.### The way around that problem on 10/12m is this.....[a] Use a 10-1000 pf ceranic vac cap for 160-10m.... the other cap is a 12- 500 pf jennings... also good.... IE: use a low min C cap. ### [b] either insert .6 uh b4 the main pi-net.... OR just tap into the masn tank coil.... at the .6uh point... with the tune cap..... amounts to the same thing... and both work good. ### with a low 1000-1500 ohm plate load Z..... AND that .6 uh coil in front of the pi-net...... the LC action of the anode C and the .6 uh.... will transform the plate load Z DOWN a huge amount..... which is what the PI-Net is then designed around.... and it's then happy. ## Using that procedure... you can get a Q of 10 pretty easy. ## an almost identical procedure is to design the 10m tank coil in the normal fashion.... then CENTER TAP it with the vac tune cap. Broadcast stations use this trick all the time. ## A Q of 8-10 is plenty imo. A Q of 7-8 is kinda low... and makes the load control very broad. Ten tec uses a real low Q on 160m on their 2x 3-500Z amp.... simply cuz their tune cap is only 375 pf to start with... so they added more tank coil to compensate... makes the loading control real broad.... and hard to hit a peak on the wattmeter. ### I use a Q of 10 [new calc method... which equates to 8 calculating it the old way]. THEN...it tunes up real smoothly... plus..... if u wanna run less suds.... by backing off the drive.... and retweaking.... the plate load Z will go UP.... and PI net Q goes UP.... and it still works good... since the Q has now gone up from 10 to 12 [new method of calculating Q] ### You run a Q of 15+ on 10m.... you will cook tank coils ! What's worse is when trying to re-use the 10m tap on 12 m.....Q goes up even more.... and u will vapourize stuff. ### IMO... to get these tubes to run right on 10/12m.... it's almost better to build a mono band 10/12m RF deck..... an re-use the existing HV supply + fil supply, etc. Jim VE7RF |