To: | Greg - ZL3IX <zl3ix@inet.net.nz> |
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Subject: | Re: Topband: Plate chokes (Balun thread) |
From: | Herb Schoenbohm <herbs@vitelcom.net> |
Date: | Fri, 02 Jan 2004 17:02:59 -0400 |
List-post: | <mailto:topband@contesting.com> |
Greg, Rockwell-Collins in the 80's marketed an AM transmitter called the "Power Rock" that used a clever grounded plate construction. (Achieving DC ground through plate resonant circuit so the RF would flow to the antenna at 50 ohms.) The PA supply voltage for a 3CX2500F3 was applied to the center tap of the filament transformer. (This principle I have not seem applied to amateur amps and can't understand why.) This was a negative 6KV in the 5KW version. If I recall correctly this eliminated both the plate blocking cap and the choke. This was a PDM "switch mod" transmitter so the modulation switch, another 3CX2500F3, was controlled through a fiber optic cable thus avoiding the DC coupling problem from a 60hz pulse train. A choke was required, however, to filter out the 60HZ switching pulses. Today most of the equipment for Broadcaster uses blocks of power mosfet amps adding up to 10KW or more. 73 Herb Schoenbohm, KV4FZ Greg - ZL3IX wrote: Back in the 80's, when I constructed my homebrew amp, I came up with the idea of removing the plate coupling cap and using a cathode coupling cap instead (cold side of the PI network). I coupled the output circuit using a simple 1:1 transformer with enough DC isolation between pri and sec to keep the HT off the antenna.
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