> Moral of the story: Build the amp for the capability you are going to use
> it> at. Not for what it could be operated at.
>
I strongly disagree with that advice.
Harris had a large contract with the Navy to build an amp that was to be
mounted deep into the bowels of ships and operated in a no-time-limit, 1000
watts output on RTTY, and all other modes. Another challenge was that it was
to be "no-tune" from 2-30 mhz with no gaps in that range. Intermodulation
products needed to be down 40 db below full rated output in all modes. It
needed to be as idiot-proof as possible, and easy to repair. (.5 hours mean
time to repair) It needed to operate in ambient temperatures up to 50
degrees C.
The product was the RF-110A, which exceeded all the expectations, and then
some. Hundreds, if not thousands were produced. I have two of them in
operation here. They are over 20 years old, and have all the original parts
and tubes. Two 8660 tubes, with an anode voltage of 500 v boost the RF input
power of 100 mw to 10 watts to drive a pair of 4CX1500B's. If you look up
"headroom" in the dictionary, there should be a picture of the 110A there!
(((73))))
Phil Clements, K5PC
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