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Re: [Amps] SB-200 input.

To: amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] SB-200 input.
From: Manfred Mornhinweg <manfred@ludens.cl>
Date: Fri, 25 Jul 2014 16:53:42 +0000
List-post: <amps@contesting.com">mailto:amps@contesting.com>
Hi all,

adding to Carl's comment:

Tuned inputs provide the flywheel effect that makes the tubes easier to drive and improves IMD 5-10dB.

That's indeed to biggest reason to use a tuned input. The impedance of a class AB grounded grid tube's cathode varies dramatically throughout the RF cycle. During a good part of the cycle, the tube is cut off entirely, and the cathode impedance is essentially infinite. During the rest of the cycle, the tube conducts, and the cathode has an impedance that changes depending on the instantaneous current. The curves of triodes are pretty crooked, and this reflects on the cathode. Having a big flywheel there, meaning a relatively high Q network of some sort, helps a lot in keeping the waveform clean, and in providing a huge drive current during that part of the cycle when the cathode needs it, while accumulating energy from the driver not needed by the cathode when it's in cut-off.

The point is that with any grounded grid amplifier, you need a reasonably high Q network between the driver's output tube or transistors, and the amplifer's cathode. If the driver radio has a tuned output network, such as the PI tank of a tube rig, that's really quite enough, and a WELL DESIGNED broadband drive matching circuit can work OK. Same thing if you have a solid state radio with an antenna tuner inserted between the radio and the amplifier. In that case the tuner provides the required Q and flywheel effect - or at least we can hope the Q is high enough! But if you have a bare bones solid state radio, whose only flywheel effect comes from a 5 pole lowpass filter having a Q of unity, you will see trouble with a broadband cathode driving circuit. In that case, a tuned drive circuit works wonders.

We can also see it this way: When you load a radio with a correctly tuned antenna, or with a plain resistor (dummy load), it sees a constant load all through the RF cycle, and that load is ideally 50 ohm, making an SWR of 1:1. But if you connect it to the cathode of a grounded grid tube, it sees a terribly varying impedance, with the SWR being far above 1:1 most of the time, and at infinity for a part of the RF cycle. No amount of broadband matching can fix that! Any matching transformer can only change an impedance by a fixed ratio, it cannot match to a wildly varying impedance. But if you insert a tuned circuit, which acts as a flywheel, this tuned circuit evens out the varying impedance of the cathode, and presents the average impedance to the driving radio, smoothly and cleanly. This impedance may still be wrong, but at least it's constant throughout the RF cycle, and that allows matching it to a nice 1:1 SWR with either a broadband transformer or a resonant network. Usually, when you go to the trouble to install such a resonant circuit, it's very easy to tap it for 50 ohm, or to elaborate it into a PI section having 50 ohm input impedance. So that's what's usually done, rather than combining a broadband transformer with a set of simple tuned circuits.

Please note that there is yet another problem: The tuned cathode matching circuit can very well even out the cathode impedance over the RF cycle, but it cannot do anything when the average impedance over the RF cycle varies according to the amplitude of the signal! So, even with a tuned matching network, the input SWR can change according to the exact instantaneous drive level. That is, an amplifier might present a 1:1 SWR to the radio at 50 watts CW drive level, but at 100W or at 20W the SWR will be higher. During SSB transmission, the SWR will be varying all the time, according to the signal's envelope. Some radios cope better with this than others. If an amplifier needs far less drive power than the radio can deliver, it's a good idea to insert an attenuator, so that the radio runs at full power, and the attenuator dampens the SWR changes of the amp.

But the best way to avoid all this trouble is to avoid grounded grid amplifiers! If you use a grid-driven amplifier in class AB1, the tubes almost don't load the driver at all. A dummy load inside the amplifier loads the driver smoothly and cleanly. No tuned drive circuits are required, no drive distortion happens, and many tubes can be driven without needing any impedance transformation, and just a low drive power at 50 ohm. The disadvantage, of course, is that the tubes have to be tetrodes, at least, with an additional screen power supply. Triodes aren't linear enough to use them in this way.

When using MOSFETs rather than tubes, the situation in this regard is way better than with grounded grid tubes , but not as good as with grid-driven tubes in class AB1. By using proper circuit design, with enough negative feedback and resistive gate swamping, normally the performance is pretty good without needing any tuned input circuit. But in extreme cases, when milking a marginal MOSFET for all the gain it can provide, leaving no room for gate swamping nor negative feedback, a tuned input circuit can be required!

Many of you of course knew most or all of this, which is all pretty old technology, but perhaps somebody learned something new to him. And I had fun writing it...

Manfred


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