To: | amps@contesting.com |
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Subject: | Re: [Amps] HV fuse |
From: | "Ian White, G3SEK" <G3SEK@ifwtech.co.uk> |
Reply-to: | "Ian White, G3SEK" <g3sek@ifwtech.co.uk> |
Date: | Mon, 19 Jul 2004 17:44:02 +0100 |
List-post: | <mailto:amps@contesting.com> |
Joe Subich, K4IK wrote:
Thyristors are not like regular transistors. The voltage rating of a thyristor is the maximum that it can hold off before it triggers - not fails, but *triggers*. Also, thyristors can be triggered by a sudden step-up in voltage (dV/dt triggering). Both of these facts are relevant to how the circuit operates. Due to production spreads, one device in the chain will always trigger first, and this particular circuit is designed to make the rest of the devices trigger correctly in cascade. Initially, when all the devices are turned off, the chain of resistors and zeners ensures that the total voltage is equally divided between all the devices. When the first device triggers, it suddenly steps up the voltage on all the others. I believe it's mostly the dV/dt effect that then makes the next device trigger... and so on until the whole chain is conducting. Bottom line: OE5JFL's circuit works. It has been widely copied in the EME community, to protect large UHF transmitting tubes that are becoming very hard to replace at any price.
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