Hello again,
First off, regarding the linearity circuit mentioned below. Yes,
Collins 30L-1, 30S-1 and a few other manufactures amplifiers
include a linearity detector. One very interesting application
is when the detector circuit is used to actually modify the
amplifiers bias in operation. An interesting example of this
circuit was used in the WRL Galaxy 2000 HF Amplifier.
You can find the Collins 30S-1, 30L-1 and WRL Galaxy 2000 HF
Amplifier diagrams on the relocated sonic.ucdavis.edu web page.
I retired the sonic.ucd server in March of this year and relocated
the web pages to the radiowrench.com web site.
I still receive a lot of Email from people searching through
the amps archives, regarding previous posts and the old sonic.ucdavis.edu web
server site. Please note the contents
of the sonic server have simply been relocated to www.radiowrench.com/sonic
Most all the original sonic server contents plus a few new
additions are on the www.radiowrench.com/sonic web page.
If you'd like to do a quite preview of the mentioned Linearity
Detector Circuit in the Galaxy 2000 HF Amplifier, the
http://www.radiowrench.com/sonic/so02192.html description page
has a thumbnail picture for a quick preview. If you want the
full size files, simply download the zip/pdf file from the main page.
Cheers,
Skipp
nospam4me@juno.com
www.radiowrench.com/sonic
[paste]
> Jason Buchanan wrote:
>
>I noticed in the 1972/1973 ARRL handbooks that I have there is a
>4-1000A amplifier project with a linearity metering circuit. Look for
>the SS-2000 project. This seems like an incredibly good idea, however
>I have never seen anything like this in any other amplifier except for
>something similar apparently in the ACOM 1000A (and presumably the
>2000). It seems to me that the ability to tune for optimum linearity
>would be a "Good Thing"(tm) and the circuit design appeard to be simple
>to implement.
>
>Was the original designer of this circuit blowing smoke or is this
>something worthwhile to add to a homebrew amp?
[paste Ian's follow up reply]
I don't have that particular ARRL Handbook, but the circuit is possibly
something like Collins use(d) as combined tuning/loading/linearity
meter. It is described in 'Single Sideband Principles & Circuits' by
Pappenfus and his Collins colleagues.
It's simply a pair of diode detectors. One looks at a sample of the
cathode RF voltage (typically at the in a GG amp) and gives a negative
DC output. The other looks at a sample of the plate RF voltage, and
gives a positive DC output.
These two outputs are combined through a DC balance pot, and fed to a
center-zero meter. When the amp is correctly tuned and loaded, this
internal pot is adjusted so the meter reads exactly zero. For improved
linearity, you would probably load on the heavy side from the point of
maximum RF output, in the usual way. Whatever you decide is "correct",
you set the balance pot to read zero under those conditions.
To use the meter for pi-tank tuning, simply tune for maximum rightward
(positive) deflection.
As a loading indicator, the meter is actually measuring the *gain* of
the amplifier - it reads zero when the amp is loaded to give the correct
level of gain. Too much gain (too light loading) makes the meter move
right; too little gain (too heavy loading) makes the meter move left.
Any single-meter (or single bargraph) indicator probably has to be of
this 'Collins' type. To use it, simply tune for max, load for center
zero, and repeat those two steps until you're exactly there.
With normal modulation, the needle should stay pretty much on zero. If
the amp is overdriven into flat-topping, the gain will drop and the
needle will move leftward, so it acts as a simple linearity meter.
It's obviously pretty easy to automate the basic tuneup procedure in a
computer-controlled amp. More advanced auto-tune amps use a separate
phase detector to identify the correct output tuning point, which is
0deg phase shift between input and output (for a GG amp).
Hmm... my amp has an unused position on the meter switch... thanks for
making me think about this, Jason!
Ian
________________________________________________________________
Speed up your surfing with Juno SpeedBand.
Now includes pop-up blocker!
Only $14.95/ month - visit http://www.juno.com/surf to sign up today!
_______________________________________________
Amps mailing list
Amps@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps
|