Hi Ron,
On 10/21/2013 7:05 PM, KA4INM wrote:
On 10/21/13 18:15, Jim Barber wrote:
Has anyone had experience using microwave oven door glass as a shielded
viewport for an HF amp? Any ideas about attenuation at HF frequencies?
I'm considering a three-tube 3500ZG amp as one of my winter projects,
and was thinking it would be fun to show the tubes with their cheery
cherry glow.
How may output Watts will you be producing?
(or are you just going to detune the plate until everything turns red)
375 watts carrier, 1500 watts PEP. That will get 2 tubes orange with any
compression at all. I was thinking 3 tubes because 2 seems to be close
to the edge for true legal limit operation. Two would be easier to deal
with from the filament transformer and choke side, that's for sure.
> My mw ovens have a steel plate with a bunch of holes in it behind the
glass to block the RF, this shouldn't be much of a concern at 29 MHz and
below.
I have a couple of different kinds here. One has a wire grid that is
either embedded in the glass or sandwiched between two glass sheets. The
large in-wall unit is something like you describe, except the perforated
metal appears to be between two glass sheets. I'm thinking either type
would work with some kind of clamping bezel, assuming I can duplicate
how they're grounded to the door metal.
Thanks and 73,
Jim N7CXI
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