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Re: [Amps] home brew amp

To: amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] home brew amp
From: Charles Farr <cefarr@hughes.net>
Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2017 06:08:23 -0800
List-post: <amps@contesting.com">mailto:amps@contesting.com>
My Dad, built several amplifiers, one was a pair of 813s. During his career in the Air Force, he belonged to MARS, and a lot of parts came through that system. My brother, W6IJ, and I spent a lot of our time at the Travis AFB MARS station. We cut our ham radio teeth there. Learned the code, basic electronics. Ham radio became the "thing" that us boys did together.

I remember coming home from overseas and seeing the 813 amplifier. It was UGLY, a real hodge-podge of repurposed former military cabinetry. It was reasonably safe, but the power supply was another thing. He had it under the table and the components were exposed. The bleeder resistor was exposed on top of the power supply where if you weren't careful, you could get your feet in a perilous situation.

I couldn't stand for that and while I was home on leave I built a cover for the power supply. Dad just couldn't see the need for it. His premise was that he was the only operator, knew the power supply was there and so he didn't think it was a big deal.

That amp worked very well, and offered switchable biasing for AB2 and C class. Dad, WQ6H, loved CW, so it HAD to have class C capability.

That amp/power supply had a 115 VAC transformer in it, so it dimmed the lights throughout the house when he keyed it. Luckily, our nearest neighbors were about a 1/4 mile away. Nonetheless, I'm pretty sure they all knew when Dad was on the air. TV was unwatchable in our house when the rig was operation.

These days, we're pretty spoiled by advances in technology, both in ham radio and in TV. The advent of cable and satellite has made the likelyhood of interference much less of a problem.

Chuck, W6AJW




On 01/13/2017 11:42 PM, Fuqua, Bill L wrote:
   As a teenager I too built unshielded amplifiers.
I just wanted to get results and then do something else.
I got my general in 1962 or 63. don't recall.
  My first HB rig was a 6AG7,6L6 and pair of 6146Bs on CW. I then went to SSB 
with a CE 10A which drove my
6146Bs, and later I made a amp with a pair of 813's and then went to a pair of 
grounded grid 250th tubes.
The HB transmitter was shielded but the amps were not.
73
Bill wa4lav

________________________________________
From: Amps [amps-bounces@contesting.com] on behalf of Russ Williams via Amps 
[amps@contesting.com]
Sent: Friday, January 13, 2017 10:36 PM
To: Arnie Pfingst; amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] home brew amp

Arnie,  thank you for posting this.  I am glad to hear there were others whose 
audio came into the neighbors stereos and scrambled TV reception.  I didn't 
have the opportunity to become a ham during my school years, so I went the CB 
route and built 11 meter sweep tube amplifiers from my high school junior year, 
1973 and forward, finally getting my novice ticket in 1985.  I am still 
building today and play with regens and am sorting out a 4-400A 6 meter amp I 
built a few years ago.73,RussKW6T


       From: Arnie Pfingst <arnie123@hotmail.com>
  To: "amps@contesting.com" <amps@contesting.com>
  Sent: Friday, January 13, 2017 3:13 PM
  Subject: [Amps] home brew amp



I've been reading about how several people on here built an amp and how it 
works or doesn't work
I had my General Lic. before I graduated H.S (1972). I thought I was good with 
electronic design and knew everything about building stuff.

My station was all, Heathkit SB 300 receiver, SB 401 transmitter, SB 600 
speaker, monitor scope, antenna tuner, EV desk mic, and phone patch.

Not bad for a kid just out of High School. I thought the only thing missing was 
an amplifier. My dad suggested I build one, (he worked CW in the spark gap days 
his call was 9ccj)

so I did.

I found a pair of new 813 tubes on the old 40 meter swap net, and scrounged all 
of the the parts needed for a separate power supply that sat on the floor.

When it was done, I think it put out about 500 watts into a wire. I got my WAS 
and WATV in one weekend!!! (worked all stereos, and worked all TV) I was proud 
of my accomplishment,

it all worked. Shielding? i didn't have money for that so the tubes just sat on 
top on the chassis directly in front of a small blower. My dad was ready to

kick my ass for doing this after he had words with most of the neighbors. My 
point is to encourage people to continue building and TRYING things.
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