Earlier Ten-Tec rigs I have owned, such as the Delta, the Corsair II, and the
Omni VI+ all
have wattmeters which attempt to show the actual amount of RF output and
reflected power
on a Bruene-type circuit. The Orion does not seem to indicate the actual
level of RF output
on the meter; rather it seems to show the percentage of full power the operator
sets - that is,
100 indicates 100% of full power as set by the internal ALC pot, which could be
more or
less than 100 watts. My experience with two Orions is that the factory sets
this level to be
100 watts.
The purpose of ALC in the Ten-Tec radios appears to be to hold the peak forward
power
at the level selected by the operator regardless of the SWR. So, while most JA
rigs, and
apparently the West Coast "competition" turn back the peak forward power under
high
SWR conditions, the Ten-Tec radios historically have maintained the peak power
set until
the rig draws overcurrent which then powers the entire radio down. If you take
a look at
the classical Motorola RF power transistor data sheets, they are specified to
provide that
power under 30:1 SWRs; there should be no need to reduce forward power in a
properly
designed solid state amplifier. The key is to maintain the peak power at the
desired limit
(100 watts forward power in this case); this means the ALC circuit will need to
change
the drive level to maintain that desired forward power as the load SWR changes.
This is an issue for the WRTC-2010 competitors as noted on their reflector. If
the antenna
has a high SWR, the forward power may increase over the 100 watt limit while
maintaining
100 watts net power (forward minus reflected). I measured the foward power of
both
my two Orions and my remaining Omni VI+ as staying within a needle's width of
the set
forward power while the SWR went from 1:1 to over 10:1 (using monoband antennas
on the "wrong" bands). Thus, the Ten-Tec radios met the WRTC-2010 spec while
other
radios may have to incorporate an external antenna tuner to avoid rules
violations. (See
the WRTC-2010 rules for additional information on this point about why internal
tuners
are not useful for this contest.)
There were some posts a few years back about the speech processing on the Orion
v1 versus v2 and the effictiveness of that processing. My personal experience
has been
that while I definitely needed the external Ten-Tec RF speech processor on the
Omni VI
to be contest competitive, the internal firmware speech processing on the Orion
(level
6 or 7) has been equally effective in practice for me. I have not tried my
external processor
on the Orion, as it is waaaaay down on the list of things to do here.
Terry Zivney, N4TZ/9,
still trying to figure out the best way to get an Orion to Russia with love...
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