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Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

 

On Nov 2, 2006, at 6:46 PM, zerobeat40 wrote:

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:


On Nov 2, 2006, at 2:49 PM, zerobeat40 wrote:

My word, did I write that? At my age, I am often guilty of mis- types
of all sorts. 20 mA is far more than I would expect, and I seem to
recall that I did the experiment shortly after writing about it here.
I probably posted the results as well. Certainly there is grid
current in the normal direction.
Not with several volts negative on the grid with respect to the cathode.
Did you measure it or are you still depending on the data sheet?
Both. but not with a uA meter.


As long as the tube is not cut-off,
it is a guarantee that some electrons will intercept the grid. Grid
current will not be zero unless the tube is cutoff.
hardly
Did you measure that, or are you still consulting the road map which
may or may not agree with the roads?
What's my surname?


Please do not hesitate to point out errors and inconsistencies.
Never, ever.
Glad to hear it. I'm thankful for this new group, we need never
mention the old one and we'll likely be happier.
The AMPS group is doing today what it was originally designed to do: save Tom from the problems he caused to himself during the parasitics debate on rec.amateur-radio.homebrew - an uncensored Newsgroup. I got booted off of AMPS 4-times for questioning Tom's questionable statements. As I see it, a discussion group that allows any participant to get away with technical bologna and censors members who ask embarrassing questions is rotten.


There
are days when I am amazed that I remember which end of a fork to hold.
Forrest Gump was right, Zed, and it definitely happens to us codgers.
I qualified for my first senior citizen discount 45 years ago.
You got me beat.


Must
have become a codger about the same time. I think that phase ends,
like adolescence. I think I fall into that category known as a living
sarcophagus.
chortle -- or how about a virtual mummy?

cheerz

Whatever it's called today, I know I've always been a
curmudgeon.

Z





Yahoo! Groups Links




R L Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734
r@..., , rlm@..., www.somis.org


Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

zerobeat40
 

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:


On Nov 2, 2006, at 2:49 PM, zerobeat40 wrote:

My word, did I write that? At my age, I am often guilty of mis-types
of all sorts. 20 mA is far more than I would expect, and I seem to
recall that I did the experiment shortly after writing about it here.
I probably posted the results as well. Certainly there is grid
current in the normal direction.
Not with several volts negative on the grid with respect to the cathode.
Did you measure it or are you still depending on the data sheet?


As long as the tube is not cut-off,
it is a guarantee that some electrons will intercept the grid. Grid
current will not be zero unless the tube is cutoff.
hardly
Did you measure that, or are you still consulting the road map which
may or may not agree with the roads?


Please do not hesitate to point out errors and inconsistencies.
Never, ever.
Glad to hear it. I'm thankful for this new group, we need never
mention the old one and we'll likely be happier.


There
are days when I am amazed that I remember which end of a fork to hold.
Forrest Gump was right, Zed, and it definitely happens to us codgers.
I qualified for my first senior citizen discount 45 years ago. Must
have become a codger about the same time. I think that phase ends,
like adolescence. I think I fall into that category known as a living
sarcophagus. Whatever it's called today, I know I've always been a
curmudgeon.

Z


Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

 

On Nov 2, 2006, at 3:30 PM, Tony King - W4ZT wrote:

I would expect, at that plate voltage and 3-5 volts bias you'd have
significant ZSAC... but I'd think that grid current, if any, with no
drive would be measured in microamps. True?
Probably pico-A with 5v of reverse bias.

73, Tony W4ZT

zerobeat40 wrote:
--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:

True enough, Denny
Z. I did the same experiment when I was in college. Zeb's problem
is that he is the person who said:
#643
Re: SB-220 Questions

"With 3.5kV applied, a
good tube in one socket, and +3-5V on the cathode with no RF drive,
you should have about 20mA grid current in the normal direction."
- Z
My word, did I write that? At my age, I am often guilty of mis-types
of all sorts. 20 mA is far more than I would expect, and I seem to
recall that I did the experiment shortly after writing about it here.
I probably posted the results as well. Certainly there is grid
current in the normal direction. As long as the tube is not cut-off,
it is a guarantee that some electrons will intercept the grid. Grid
current will not be zero unless the tube is cutoff.

Please do not hesitate to point out errors and inconsistencies. There
are days when I am amazed that I remember which end of a fork to hold.


Z


Yahoo! Groups Links




R L Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734
r@..., , rlm@..., www.somis.org


Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

 

On Nov 2, 2006, at 2:49 PM, zerobeat40 wrote:

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:

True enough, Denny
Z. I did the same experiment when I was in college. Zeb's problem
is that he is the person who said:
#643
Re: SB-220 Questions

"With 3.5kV applied, a
good tube in one socket, and +3-5V on the cathode with no RF drive,
you should have about 20mA grid current in the normal direction."
- Z
My word, did I write that? At my age, I am often guilty of mis-types
of all sorts. 20 mA is far more than I would expect, and I seem to
recall that I did the experiment shortly after writing about it here.
I probably posted the results as well. Certainly there is grid
current in the normal direction.
Not with several volts negative on the grid with respect to the cathode.

As long as the tube is not cut-off,
it is a guarantee that some electrons will intercept the grid. Grid
current will not be zero unless the tube is cutoff.
hardly

Please do not hesitate to point out errors and inconsistencies.
Never, ever. This is what got me jackbooted off of AMPS, Zed. Examples of statements that I questioned: AC circuit analysis does not work with R/L VHF parasitic suppressors; Ni-Cr alloys (a.k.a. resistance-wire) has reverse skin effect as frequency decreases; VHF- resonant circuits can not ring when pulsed; dip=meters are unreliable, over-driving an SB-220 can produce 3x the normal pk-V in the anode circuitry, on and on in the world according to W8JI.

There
are days when I am amazed that I remember which end of a fork to hold.
Forrest Gump was right, Zed, and it definitely happens to us codgers.

cheers


Z






Yahoo! Groups Links




R L Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734
r@..., , rlm@..., www.somis.org


Re: new alpha amps newsgroup?

KR4DA
 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

That's too bad.. it's elitist...
I can remove any email (spammer) by just administering
the list. His excuse of stopping spammers is bogus...
There was a ALPHA list somewhere else too...maybe it went defunct.
I know I joined it about 10 years ago but left after a FEW YEARS..
no messages....NO ONE EVER HAD PROBELMS... :-)

Larry Anderson wrote:

Mark wrote:

> I just ran across this on yahoo groups
>
>
> <>
>
> 73
> Mark
> W0NCL
>
> __________________________________________________________
> Get your email and see which of your friends are online - Right on the
> New Yahoo.com
> ( <>)
>
>

And apparently you must have a call sign to join too.


-- 
Bob
Vmoa chat list -> 
Vmoa tech list home -> 


Middleburg Fl (South Jacksonville)
ICQ 13912841
Web Page 

Visit the FDXPG at  

Ham Radio Calls: KR4DA FG/KR4DA J79DA HK0/KR4DA

Motorcycles CBMMA #4
1977 XS750D 1J7008405
1997 Vmax12J VMOA #504 


Re: What happened to message 863 ??? IMD on new xcvr's

KR4DA
 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Message 863 is not there as you stated...
I have no clue where it went..
And there is NO censoreing on this list.

Just play nice.

pentalab wrote:

If u scroll through the messages... u will see that # 863 has been
blown out ! I responded to it last night... then it comes back
as "message 863 can't be retrieved" Did the fellow blow it out
himself... or was it censored... or what ?




-- 
Bob
Vmoa chat list -> 
Vmoa tech list home -> 


Middleburg Fl (South Jacksonville)
ICQ 13912841
Web Page 

Visit the FDXPG at  

Ham Radio Calls: KR4DA FG/KR4DA J79DA HK0/KR4DA

Motorcycles CBMMA #4
1977 XS750D 1J7008405
1997 Vmax12J VMOA #504 


Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

zerobeat40
 

Microamps is still not zero...Rich is claiming zero.

I think I measured fractional milliamps - e.g. hundreds of microamps.
May have to re-run the exp.

The 3-500Z is not a tube I have a lot of experience with, certainly
later in my career power levels of that nature would be handled with
silicon.

Z


--- In ham_amplifiers@..., Tony King - W4ZT
<w4zt-060920@...> wrote:

I would expect, at that plate voltage and 3-5 volts bias you'd have
significant ZSAC... but I'd think that grid current, if any, with no
drive would be measured in microamps. True?

73, Tony W4ZT

zerobeat40 wrote:
--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:

True enough, Denny
Z. I did the same experiment when I was in college. Zeb's problem
is that he is the person who said:
#643
Re: SB-220 Questions

"With 3.5kV applied, a
good tube in one socket, and +3-5V on the cathode with no RF drive,
you should have about 20mA grid current in the normal direction."
- Z
My word, did I write that? At my age, I am often guilty of mis-types
of all sorts. 20 mA is far more than I would expect, and I seem to
recall that I did the experiment shortly after writing about it here.
I probably posted the results as well. Certainly there is grid
current in the normal direction. As long as the tube is not cut-off,
it is a guarantee that some electrons will intercept the grid. Grid
current will not be zero unless the tube is cutoff.

Please do not hesitate to point out errors and inconsistencies. There
are days when I am amazed that I remember which end of a fork to hold.


Z


Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

Tony King - W4ZT
 

I would expect, at that plate voltage and 3-5 volts bias you'd have significant ZSAC... but I'd think that grid current, if any, with no drive would be measured in microamps. True?

73, Tony W4ZT

zerobeat40 wrote:

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:

True enough, Denny
Z. I did the same experiment when I was in college. Zeb's problem is that he is the person who said:
#643
Re: SB-220 Questions

"With 3.5kV applied, a
good tube in one socket, and +3-5V on the cathode with no RF drive,
you should have about 20mA grid current in the normal direction."
- Z
My word, did I write that? At my age, I am often guilty of mis-types
of all sorts. 20 mA is far more than I would expect, and I seem to
recall that I did the experiment shortly after writing about it here.
I probably posted the results as well. Certainly there is grid
current in the normal direction. As long as the tube is not cut-off,
it is a guarantee that some electrons will intercept the grid. Grid
current will not be zero unless the tube is cutoff.
Please do not hesitate to point out errors and inconsistencies. There
are days when I am amazed that I remember which end of a fork to hold.
Z


Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

zerobeat40
 

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:

True enough, Denny
Z. I did the same experiment when I was in college. Zeb's problem
is that he is the person who said:
#643
Re: SB-220 Questions

"With 3.5kV applied, a
good tube in one socket, and +3-5V on the cathode with no RF drive,
you should have about 20mA grid current in the normal direction."
- Z
My word, did I write that? At my age, I am often guilty of mis-types
of all sorts. 20 mA is far more than I would expect, and I seem to
recall that I did the experiment shortly after writing about it here.
I probably posted the results as well. Certainly there is grid
current in the normal direction. As long as the tube is not cut-off,
it is a guarantee that some electrons will intercept the grid. Grid
current will not be zero unless the tube is cutoff.

Please do not hesitate to point out errors and inconsistencies. There
are days when I am amazed that I remember which end of a fork to hold.


Z


Re: Zs FCC callsign

 

On Nov 2, 2006, at 1:10 PM, pentalab wrote:

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., "zerobeat40" <zerobeat40@...>
wrote:

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:

RICH SEZ... Do you have a FCC callsign?
Z SEZ.... No, sir. Is that a requirement for inclusion in this
group?
RICH SEZ.... Definitely Not. So why do you hide your name?

Z SEZ...I don't hide my name. My given name is Z Sampson
Thompson, per my birth cert. No ham ticket, no callsign. Not a
famous author, nobody knows me anyway. Why does it matter. I've
gone by "Z" or "Zed" all my life.

Career was spent in comunications and related...HF/SW broadcasting,
ship-to-shore, etc. Climbed lots of towers, designed lots of
transmitters, had hams around me the whole time of course and even
have been heard on HF SSB from one or another ham's station, but
never got around to getting the ham ticket.

Any other personal questions on your mind?

Z
### Hey Rich.... u finished cleaning the EGG off ur face yet ???

### Here's a fellow who has seen it all, done it all, designed it
all, repaired it all.,
Tom Rauch has done that too.

probably dealt with every manufacturer of
every piece of Commercial + Broadcast gear ever made since day
1....... then gets kicked off the... 'amp reflector'.... cuz he
doesn't have a FCC callsign !
I got kicked off and I have a callsign.

What a load of crap. It's
fellow's like this who have a lifetime of experience.... who's vast
knowledge is a major asset to a group like this.
The fly in the ointment is Zed's 20mA of grid current with the grid several volts negative with respect to the cathode.

### Rich... u can laff at 11-m ops all u want to....
I don't because I have talked to some who are knowledgeable about QRO. I talked to one 11m builder who built smaller mobile amplifiers using the 4cx3000A.


but anybody
who can design and install 3 x 3CX3000F7's in a mobile setup...
and have the where with all to generate that much AC power... plus
an ant to go with it... obviously isn't stupid.
Agreed

They got it
over our local 2M FM ops here in town... who... "touch the coax
once in a while to make sure it's not getting hot... running 25
w "

### sounds to me like "Z".... just got vindicated.
You might be treading on quicksand, Jim. Amplifier experts are experts in knowing when to use their ears instead of their mouth.

... and I
doubt "Z" would semi-float the grids on a 3-500Z linear either.
Floating 3-500Z grids does nothing very exciting.

Heck... for all we know... the "Z" in 3-500Z was probably in
his honour.
chortle

later.... Jim VE7RF





Yahoo! Groups Links




R L Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734
r@..., , rlm@..., www.somis.org


Re: Zs FCC callsign

Robert B. Bonner
 

No He's ZED from Men in Black

BOB DD

### sounds to me like "Z".... just got vindicated.... and I
doubt "Z" would semi-float the grids on a 3-500Z linear either.
Heck... for all we know... the "Z" in 3-500Z was probably in
his honour.

later.... Jim VE7RF


Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

 

On Nov 2, 2006, at 6:58 AM, ad4hk2004 wrote:

Z is slick... The bench test with just the filament heated fills the
tube with an electron cloud... The electrons have velocity... Some
will impact the grid and be captured... The grid will become more
negative and the excess electrons will flow from the grid to any less
negative point...
True enough, Denny
Z. I did the same experiment when I was in college. Zeb's problem is that he is the person who said:
#643
Re: SB-220 Questions

"With 3.5kV applied, a
good tube in one socket, and +3-5V on the cathode with no RF drive,
you should have about 20mA grid current in the normal direction."
- Z
-------------------------
With +3 to +5 volts on the cathode, "about 20mA" does not flow. Zero grid current flows because the grid potential looks negative with respect to the cathode. .

Consider, that although we view the
filament/cathode to be negative it has electrons departing under
thermal acceleration which makes the filament structure itself less
negative...
I don't have the time at the moment but I will do a bench check on
some 4CX1000's that just happen to be hanging around under the bench
at the moment... I suspect that each individual element in the tube
will show voltage/current under Z's conditions..
With 3 to 5 volts negative on the grid, there should be "about 20mA" of grid current if Z is correct in this matter.

cheers

denny / k8do





Yahoo! Groups Links




R L Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734
r@..., , rlm@..., www.somis.org


Re: Zs FCC callsign

pentalab
 

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., "zerobeat40" <zerobeat40@...>
wrote:

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:

RICH SEZ... Do you have a FCC callsign?
Z SEZ.... No, sir. Is that a requirement for inclusion in this
group?
RICH SEZ.... Definitely Not. So why do you hide your name?

Z SEZ...I don't hide my name. My given name is Z Sampson
Thompson, per my birth cert. No ham ticket, no callsign. Not a
famous author, nobody knows me anyway. Why does it matter. I've
gone by "Z" or "Zed" all my life.

Career was spent in comunications and related...HF/SW broadcasting,
ship-to-shore, etc. Climbed lots of towers, designed lots of
transmitters, had hams around me the whole time of course and even
have been heard on HF SSB from one or another ham's station, but
never got around to getting the ham ticket.

Any other personal questions on your mind?

Z
### Hey Rich.... u finished cleaning the EGG off ur face yet ???

### Here's a fellow who has seen it all, done it all, designed it
all, repaired it all., probably dealt with every manufacturer of
every piece of Commercial + Broadcast gear ever made since day
1....... then gets kicked off the... 'amp reflector'.... cuz he
doesn't have a FCC callsign ! What a load of crap. It's
fellow's like this who have a lifetime of experience.... who's vast
knowledge is a major asset to a group like this.

### Rich... u can laff at 11-m ops all u want to.... but anybody
who can design and install 3 x 3CX3000F7's in a mobile setup...
and have the where with all to generate that much AC power... plus
an ant to go with it... obviously isn't stupid. They got it
over our local 2M FM ops here in town... who... "touch the coax
once in a while to make sure it's not getting hot... running 25
w "

### sounds to me like "Z".... just got vindicated.... and I
doubt "Z" would semi-float the grids on a 3-500Z linear either.
Heck... for all we know... the "Z" in 3-500Z was probably in
his honour.

later.... Jim VE7RF


Re: What happened to message 863 ??? IMD on new xcvr's

pentalab
 

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., "zerobeat40" <zerobeat40@...>
wrote:

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., "pentalab" <jim.thomson@>
wrote:
The 2 tone test is flawed, and isn't used anymore in the
commercial world. By juggling the spacing of the 2 x tones,
you can hit a .."sweet spot" and come up with really good IMD
numbers.

Z SEZ.... That's usually with very wide spacing. At very narrow
spacing, you challenge the power supply bypassing, so the worst
numbers often occur at that test condition.

### say what ??? What diff does the spacing on a 2 tone test
have to do with challenging the HV supply bypassing... or any other
supply ? What am I missing here ?? The HV supply is just
pumping out DC current... nothing else. A 2 x tone test should
be in a steady state... ur not modulating it at an audio rate or
anything else ?


They all use the noise test these days... pump the xcvr with
bandwidth limited white noise.... that will drive the xcvr to
full pep output.... and simulate voice or many data tones. In
the commercial world, it's common to use 4 x multiplexed ssb
channels... or as many as 16 x mark/space combo's...
sometimes interleaved.
Z SEZ... Power Ratio puts band-limited white noise through the
rig, with a notch in the middle of it. IMD products will tend to
fill in the notch. Very harsh test.

### I tried it last night. Easy to do. The TX filters in my
xcvr are 6 khz wide. I notched out the portion from 2-4 kz.... and
passed 0-2 khz.... and 4-6 khz. You can hear the 2-4 notched
out portion.... being partially filled in.... on a 2nd Rx...3'
away. IMO... this just shows one INBAND IMD. Still... it
also shows OUT of band IMD.... a good test...and easy to do with a
Behringer DEQ-2496 master processor.




Here's a quote from "SSB systems and circuits"

"ANOTHER deficiency of the 2 x tone test is that the "3rd
order"
products observed on a spectrum analyzer are actually the sum
of
the 3rd and ALL higher ODD order components. Typ, the 5th
order
component is OUT of phase with the 3rd, which tends to PRODUCE
distortion CANCELLATION. This leaves the FALSE impression that
the
IMD is better than it really is."
Z SEZ...Sad It's in error. The 5th order component is at a
different frequency than the 3rd order component, therefore they
are completely distinguishable from each other.

Ex: 5MHz and 5.001MHz are the incident sigs. The 3rd ord will be
4.999 and 5.002 MHz. 5th order will be 4.998 and 5.003 MHz. They
don't sit on each other, and don't add to each other in any way.
### I don't think that's their point. Usual deal is to feed two
transmitter's, each with a dead cxr... into a combiner... then the
combined output feeds a Class A amp.. like a 4x5.... then into
linear amp under test. [both Eimac/Rauch and ARRL lab use the same
method] There is nothing to stop the PHASE of the IMD
products from being out of phase with each other... which could
easily skew the results.




BTW... when running white noise into the xcvr.... the plate
current on the linear is EXACTLY 1/2 the key down value.... so
u can use white noise to tweak the tune/load caps to max pep
output.
Z SEZ... You're driving it too hard. Peak to average ratio of BW-
limited white noise (the voltage distribution of BW-limited white
noise is closer to a Rayleigh distribution) is approx 16:1. The
word "approx" is important beause in truth, there is some
percentage probability of ANY power level being present at some
time. 16:1 is the diff between 50% probabiliy and 1%. Adequate
for communications-grade amps.

### I put some pure NON notched, full 0-20 khz white noise from
external audio rack gear directly into analog BM of xcvr. No ALC
showing... nothing over driven either. Then watched the RF on the
RF monitor scope... plus has 2 x PEP wattmeter's running... plus
2 x more wattmeter's.. switched to 'AVERAGE' Plate current on
linear is exactly one half the key down value. AVERAGE RF output
is only 1/5 the PEP output... or 14 db down from PEAK... or
7db down from PEP.

In U.S. dialects, a vocalized sibiliant contains both low and
high. E.G. "Z" or "J". However, the wide-spaced test is actually
one of those that does not stress the power supply much, therefore
you tend to get artificially good values.

Try as hard as you want... you can't find ANY combo of words or
phrases that will produce SIMULTANEOUS highs and lows.
Sure can...any vocalized sibilant. To be exact, "Z" is a "voiced
alveolar sibilant" and is often used as a "torture test" for
system BW commercially when test gear is unavailable.

### are u talking about "ZEE" or a "ZED" Not much of a torture
test at all. ZEE or ZED has not much low content in it at
all. Now words like Boom... Four... Ola... etc... will really
enhance low freq stuff... and the peak to average ratio really
drops. The point here is that ESSB doesn't splatter all over the
band.




Has anybody tried adjusting the Zsac on these big tubes from
one
extreme to the other.. and actually measured the imd ??
Kinda a
moot point... unless the xcvr is the same or better IMD wise,
nobody would ever hear any benefit.
The tendency is for IMD to vary in only a small amount. You can
improve it at low levels by sending the ZSAC very high, but that
does not change IMD at high levels. When you get ZSAC to a too-low
level, IMD shoots up quite a bit. That's why even in commercial
gear, fixed-voltage bias is common, it just doesn't matter much as
long as you've got some ZSAC.

### This is what I suspected. I also heard... if u bias a GG amp
like a SB-220 into zero zsac [class b] or into class C... on
CW, u will get key clicks ???

### I'm gonna try it anyway. I don't like this fixed bias idea..
never did. I see too many differences in zsac... between 4 x
diff tubes... all new... same maker... change maker's... diff
results. I have seen flat tubes with more zsac than a good
one.... [this is for a fixed bias V]

### On multiple tube GG amps... I used 2 x fil xfmrs [or 0ne
fil xfmr.. with 2 x sec] with 3 x separate plate curent
shunts.... one for tube 1 one for tube 2.. and 3rd for tubes
1+2. Plus independent adjustable bias for EACH tube.

## Now I just mess with one tube linears. Being able to vary the
bias from A-Z is a huge advantage. The constant current graphs
for most tubes... esp big ones... sorta are ballpark zsac
values... for say zero bias... and a fixed plate V..... could be
anywhere between 2 x extremes. A 3x 3... per the graphs could
idle at anywhere from 250-600 ma with zero bias at say 5 kv.
I want it to idle at 150 ma.... so just installed a sting of
6 A diodes... and a rotary switch... plus a huge lytic across the
entire string... works slick. Those zeners are a pain... and
failure prone... and none adjustable. Back in the mid-late
70's... 50 watt zener's were a dime a doz.. and cheap....but they
had to be heat sinked too... and insulated from chassis. Zener's
are ancient history now.

### This should be fun running the MK-V in Class A... then
tweaking the bias on the GG amp from Class A to AB.... then see
what happens. The amp will probably need it's tuned input
tweaked a tiny bit... diito with PI out put.... each time bias is
changed radically. Of course the anode diss will go UP...
since the eff in class A is going down. I'm guessing 25%
eff in Class A.

later... Jim VE7RF

Z


Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

ad4hk2004
 

Z is slick... The bench test with just the filament heated fills the
tube with an electron cloud... The electrons have velocity... Some
will impact the grid and be captured... The grid will become more
negative and the excess electrons will flow from the grid to any less
negative point... Consider, that although we view the
filament/cathode to be negative it has electrons departing under
thermal acceleration which makes the filament structure itself less
negative...
I don't have the time at the moment but I will do a bench check on
some 4CX1000's that just happen to be hanging around under the bench
at the moment... I suspect that each individual element in the tube
will show voltage/current under Z's conditions..

denny / k8do


Re: IMD on xcv'rs

 

On Nov 1, 2006, at 10:13 PM, Jan Erik Holm wrote:

Yeah thats far far too much, he must have had some dirt
on his glasses when he did that measurement.
My guess is that his glass had been emptied before he made this measurement. cheers, Jim

I have a T-4XC on the shelf, one of these days I will
measure it.

73 Jim SM2EKM
-------------------
pentalab wrote:
have wrong ? No way in hell ur gonna get -58 db pep from any
drake T4XC...couldn't been a typo... since he quotes the same
drake numbers time and again.

later... Jim VE7RF

73, Tony W4ZT

R L Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734
r@..., , rlm@..., www.somis.org


Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

 

On Nov 1, 2006, at 5:59 PM, zerobeat40 wrote:

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:

It can't be Rauch because he knows that the grid has to be positive
with respect to the cathode in order for grid-current to flow.
Sounds like someone needs to review his basic tube theory.
Specifically, look up "contact potential bias".
As I recall, the problem is that "Z" previously stated that, according to the characteristic curves, a 3-500Z(?) flows __mA of grid current when the grid-cathode potential is negative __V. According to the characteristic curves, grid current does not flow until the grid is positive.
Free, unsolicited advice: when you step in it, you can not succeed in hiding it from others - even if you are a discussion group "Administrator" who censors posts that discuss his misstatements.

Now, for the experiment.

Lay tube on bench. Any tube, as long as it works. Apply specified
filament/heater current. Place a high-Z voltmeter between the
cathode/fil and the control grid. Once the cathode warms up, what do
you read? Is the grid negative W.R.T. to cathode, or positive? Given
that the voltmeter has finite resistance, would you say that the grid
current is zero, or non-zero?

Connect a 100kohm resistor between grid and cathode. Measure the
potential difference between grid and cathode. Given that this
voltage is non-zero, is there grid current? What is the polarity of
the voltage?

The experiment is more dramatic with a transmitting tube. I don't
recall what the values will be for a 3-500Z, but I just ran through
some 4CX250Bs...typ voltage developed in the experiment is control
grid negative to cathode by 15-30 volts, with grid current flowing.
The only places where like charges attract are West Hollywood, Palm Springs, the Gay Bay (SF) et cetera.

Let us know the results.
he has a mouse in his pocket?

cheerz

...
R L Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734
r@..., , rlm@..., www.somis.org


Re: Zs FCC callsign

 

On Nov 1, 2006, at 5:49 PM, zerobeat40 wrote:

--- In ham_amplifiers@..., R L Measures <r@...> wrote:


Do you have a FCC callsign?
No, sir. Is that a requirement for inclusion in this group?
Definitely Not. So why do you hide your name?
I don't hide my name.
It does not appear in your signature.

My given name is Z
for Zebediah?

Sampson Thompson, per my
birth cert. No ham ticket, no callsign. Not a famous author, nobody
knows me anyway. Why does it matter.
Because you are a human just like most of the rest of us.

I've gone by "Z" or "Zed" all
my life.

Career was spent in comunications and related...HF/SW broadcasting,
ship-to-shore, etc. Climbed lots of towers, designed lots of
transmitters, had hams around me the whole time of course and even
have been heard on HF SSB from one or another ham's station, but never
got around to getting the ham ticket.

Any other personal questions on your mind?
Do you still maintain that a grid can flow current when the grid-to- cathode potential is negative?

Z
cheers, Zed
...
R L Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734
r@..., , rlm@..., www.somis.org


Re: IMD (was 3XYC156)

Brian
 

Gidday Z,
Keep postin mate,callsigns dont matter, I don't post, just like to read an learn...just finnished me first amp an picking up tips for me next one...so keep em coming.
Cookie
zl4ad


Re: IMD on xcv'rs

 

Yeah thats far far too much, he must have had some dirt
on his glasses when he did that measurement.

I have a T-4XC on the shelf, one of these days I will
measure it.

73 Jim SM2EKM
-------------------
pentalab wrote:

have wrong ? No way in hell ur gonna get -58 db pep from any drake T4XC...couldn't been a typo... since he quotes the same drake numbers time and again. later... Jim VE7RF

73, Tony W4ZT