Search String: Display: Description: Sort:

Results:

References: [ +from:jono@webspun.com: 231 ]

Total 231 documents matching your query.

81. [AMPS] Gassy Tubes and Gas Arcs (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Mon, 18 May 98 09:46:05 -0500
So you are saying that the glow is happening INSIDE the structure of the glass itself? Interesting. I'll have to check and see about that. 73, Jon KE9NA -- Jon Ogden jono@webspun.com www.qsl.net/ke9
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00319.html (8,507 bytes)

82. [AMPS] Re: Parasitics (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Mon, 18 May 98 16:26:12 -0500
Time varying resistance of the anode? You must be suggesting that the anode impedance changes over the RF conduction cycle. However, most specs sheets always list the anode impedance around a couple
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00325.html (13,623 bytes)

83. [AMPS] Re: (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Mon, 18 May 98 20:56:56 -0500
Dick, GREAT posting. Really good! He's very brilliant. And has the patience to teach some of us knuckleheads (like me) a thing or two! Agreed. Again, agreed. This was one of my original conclusions a
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00328.html (11,916 bytes)

84. [AMPS] Re: Parasitics (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Mon, 18 May 98 22:39:43 -0500
Larry, You can never go wrong having leads as short as possible. Building an HF amp with GHz techniques is a great way to go. Can't really go wrong there. While it doesn't guarantee stability, it su
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00330.html (9,549 bytes)

85. [AMPS] Re: (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Tue, 19 May 98 09:58:52 -0500
The 200 nH is inductance for the anode lines to the blocking cap were a guess by Ian. So the inductance is less. It still doesn't change the mathematical principles. Also, as we have discussed recen
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00349.html (9,250 bytes)

86. [AMPS] Re: Parasitics (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Tue, 19 May 98 10:04:39 -0500
To: <amps@contesting.com> Arrgh! I thought we worked through all that math! Gain is directly proportional to Rp. Rp is different from the R of the supressor resistor. Did you not just read Ian's note
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00353.html (9,987 bytes)

87. [AMPS] Re: Parasitics (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Tue, 19 May 98 11:32:50 -0500
Ok...I wasn't really trying to impune you. Just to make a point that I didn't feel your comment initially correct. It wasn't meant to be an insult. OK, that makes sense. Yes. Agreed. Yes, you are ri
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00358.html (13,678 bytes)

88. [AMPS] Re: Parasitics (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Tue, 19 May 98 15:08:15 -0500
Well, OK. It's certainly not how I designed my amps. While it's hard (damn near impossible) to measure S22 in a high power amplifier, we would always figure that we were pretty well matched when our
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00361.html (10,132 bytes)

89. [AMPS] Re: (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Wed, 20 May 98 00:30:50 -0500
So Rich, are you saying that textbooks are incorrect? As I thought more about this, I realized that purely reactive networks do indeed make one load look like another. For example, we make a 3500 Oh
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00371.html (10,025 bytes)

90. [AMPS] Re: (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Wed, 20 May 98 11:16:04 -0500
Do you grasp the concept of series to parallel conversions? If transforming 100 Ohms to 100K Ohms is a stretch, then how do you explain how a pi-net transforms a 3.5 KOhm output impedance of a tube
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00389.html (8,907 bytes)

91. [AMPS] Resonances (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Wed, 20 May 98 11:18:52 -0500
It can definitely change. Especially impedances at higher frequencies, etc. That's the tough part about RF. I think you measured a capacitor. These are less affected by nearness to other components,
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00391.html (8,117 bytes)

92. [AMPS] Re: Parasitics (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Thu, 21 May 98 09:29:44 -0500
Tom, The small signal level present on one of these instruments will do nothing to tell you the impedance of the cathode of a tube. I took the suggestion from a ham article to use an RX noise bridge
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00423.html (9,793 bytes)

93. [AMPS] parasitics (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Thu, 21 May 98 09:45:45 -0500
Peter, I am not saying I fully buy the parasitic theory....but.... Wouldn't an arc do fairly extreme damage like melting the grid or even vaporizing part of it? The post by John Lyles seemed to indi
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00424.html (9,287 bytes)

94. [AMPS] Generic: low out on 10m (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Thu, 21 May 98 09:59:28 -0500
This is a BIG potential problem. Good point, Tom. My original Hammond 1521 choke in my 4-1000A kept blowing up on 10 m. I also got out only a few hundred watts. Then a put a GDO on the choke. Amazin
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00425.html (7,269 bytes)

95. [AMPS] Technical Question #1 (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Thu, 21 May 98 10:04:11 -0500
I don't want to say that I am denying that Tom may have changed his story. So, let me ask the question. Maybe we can get to the truth: Tom: Did you say that you have seen parasitic oscillation damag
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00426.html (9,929 bytes)

96. [AMPS] Technical Question #1 (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Thu, 21 May 98 10:07:05 -0500
Agreed. Why is Tom unwilling to give his technical opinion on a seemingly simple question. So we don't have all the facts. So what. Hypothesize, Tom. Please don't use the red herrings any more. 73,
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00427.html (9,276 bytes)

97. [AMPS] Re: Parasitics (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Thu, 21 May 98 10:54:04 -0500
One of Murphy's Laws of Electrical Engineering: The fuse that is intended to protect a circuit will actually be protected by the circuit itself blowing up. 73, Jon KE9NA -- Jon Ogden jono@webspun.co
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00431.html (9,044 bytes)

98. [AMPS] Technical Question #1 (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Thu, 21 May 98 11:43:40 -0500
I believe there is some neutralization that can be done in GG amps. The most important aspect I recall has to do with making sure that there is a balance between the two tubes. A single tube amp nee
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00440.html (9,908 bytes)

99. [AMPS] RE: huh? (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Thu, 21 May 98 18:17:35 -0500
Where I think Rich errored and meant to say 100+j0 and 100K+j0. So, George has given the correct answer to the question asked. 73, Jon KE9NA ps: Bandwidth? What bandwidth....The internet backbones a
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00444.html (8,146 bytes)

100. [AMPS] parasitics (score: 1)
Author: jono@webspun.com (Jon Ogden)
Date: Thu, 21 May 98 18:23:55 -0500
It still doesn't answer the fundamental question: * According to literature (as posted by John Lyles), it is stated that gas arcs usually cause SEVERE damage to a tube, as in melted grids, fused gri
/archives//html/Amps/1998-05/msg00445.html (10,676 bytes)


This search system is powered by Namazu