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Re: [Amps] Question about average anode current in tetrode amplifiers on

To: flynth@gmail.com, Amps reflector <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [Amps] Question about average anode current in tetrode amplifiers on higher frequencies.
From: Victor Rosenthal 4X6GP <k2vco.vic@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 25 Nov 2024 17:30:20 +0200
List-post: <mailto:amps@contesting.com>
That amp was good for more than 1500w on all bands. There are many commercial and homebrew amps using tetrodes that can do this.

Neutralization isn't relevant to the problem that you are having.

The Q that we have been talking about in this discussion is the the Q of the tank circuit, not the Q of the coil. This Q is determined by the L/C ratio of the pi-network and the output impedance of the tube, not the X/R of the coil. Also it certainly wouldn't take 1m of tubing to make a 1 uh inductor! I think a decimal point is misplaced here!

Let me try to summarize:

The problem in your amp, as far as I can tell from your description, is that it's hard to get a LOW enough OVERALL Q of the tank circuit because of the minimum capacitance of your tuning capacitor plus output capacity plus strays. One solution to this is to add a small coil between the plate and the input of the pi-network (probably less than 1 uh). This transforms the impedance of the tube to a lower value that's easier to match with a practical pi-network.

It's important to keep the leads between the coils, capacitor, and bandswitch short so that the major part of the inductance is in the coils and not in the leads. It's possible to build a tank circuit that will not resonate at all on 10m if you are not careful about this (I've done it).

If you're using the G3SEK spreadsheet, there is a place to specify the inductance of the small coil. But you have to adjust it experimentally for best results.

If your tube needs a parasitic suppressor, you can make the coil a little bigger and solder a noninductive resistor across a section of it. This also requires experiment to find the best spot to put the tap.

I'll send you the page you requested. But I think all the information you need is here.

73,
Victor, 4X6GP
Rehovot, Israel
Formerly K2VCO
CWops no. 5
http://www.qsl.net/k2vco

On 25/11/2024 11:18, flynth@gmail.com wrote:
If you could take a photo I would appreciate it a lot.

Thank you for posting the link to your amp, it is very informative. What power output to dummy load are you getting on 10m?

After spending lots of time on this,and following with calculations I mention below I have to call BS on the idea of such an amp with a traditional PI tank ever delivering 1500W on 10m (with no neutralisation to cancel anode capacitance).

To picture the difficulty, let's take a 12mm copper tube coil. You need about 1m to make 1uH coil. Is that the thickest tube you can bend? Congrats, this coil has a Q of only 7. 1m of such tube has 28 ohms at 30Mhz. So you'd have to offset this by using even less capacitance.

Let's take a resonant circuit at 29MHz that uses such 12mm pipe and a coil 115mm in diameter. Even if you have at most 15pF total capacitance (which is impossible because the tube itself in a socket has 27pF), then you make a coil to resonate at 29MHz (2uH, 115mm diameter, 4 turns, only 1mm between turns, total length 145cm, resistance @30Mhz 39 ohm) you end up with a Q of 9.3 with NO connecting wires. Is such Q acceptable? According to articIes I read No.

Now make it more realistic by adding 10cm of very wide (2.4cm which will add probably 5pF to your stray capacitance). That adds about 4 ohms turning your Q to 8.5. What if you can't use such wide strip because of extra capacitance and you use 12mm wide? Your Q goes down to 7.7. All that in an impossible 15pF total scenario.

Let's take more realistic 35pF, this requires 0.85uH to resonate. Let's make an very good coil 110mm in dia, (again 12mm tube, 1mm space between windings) only 2.7 turns. 93cm long, 25 ohms. No leads and we're already at measly 6.3 Q.

No wonder all these books usually have half a sentence about it. They probably tried it, it didn't work, and they moved on to other designs.

I have yet to calculate alternative PI tank arrangements.

Victor,  , thank you for pointing out the inductance. The problem in my amp on 10m is indeed low Q. Both high residual capacitance (the tube in socket is 27pF, the plate cap is 12pF, but this is easily swapped, the tube can't be) and the low Q inductance are contributing to it. Without you mentioning it I would not have realised the futility of it.

73,
F


On Mon, 25 Nov 2024, 05:42 Victor Rosenthal, <k2vco.vic@gmail.com <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com>> wrote:

    I don't have an electronic version. Maybe you can get it from Google
    books? Maybe you can offer to buy the book on a ham reflector. With
    so many of my generation on the way out, these books should be
    available. Perhaps a library has one?
    I could take a photo of the section in which this is discussed and
    send it to you. But there are several whole chapters on amp design
    and construction that would be useful.
    The Bill Orr book doesn't have as much theory, but has numerous
    examples of amps that are instructive.
    It doesn't "work in the opposite direction." It does lower the
    resonant frequency if other things are unchanged, but if you reduce
    the inductance in the tank coil to bring it back to resonance, the
    result will be a lower Q which will be more efficient. Your problem
    seems to be that there is too much inductance in the leads between
    the coil, the band switch, and the tuning capacitor. Therefore you
    can't get a low enough total inductance on 10m.
    Look at the pictures of my amp at the link I sent. In the earlier
    ones I used a single massive coil of tubing. This made the leads to
    the band switch so long that it was impossible to tune to 10m. If
    you scroll down towards the end, you'll see that I split the coil
    into two sections to make it possible to have short leads.
    Many amps use a completely separate 10m coil. The coil needs to be
    right up against the band switch if possible.

    Victor 4X6GP

    On Sun, Nov 24, 2024, 23:33 <flynth@gmail.com
    <mailto:flynth@gmail.com>> wrote:

        Thank you. Do you by any chance have this book in electronic
        format? Can you post this chapter/section, perhaps?
        Alternatively I offer $30 via PayPal for the entire pdf.

        For some reason these older ARRL handbooks are absolute
        unobtanium online. Ebooks do not exist (ARRL's webstore
        redirects to page not found if you try to buy one). And paper
        copies go for many hundreds of bucks locally or take months to
        ship from overseas. Absolutely insane.

        There is newest edition on amazon (split into 6 ebook volumes
        each for $10). I bought the volume with amp info and the whole
        section you talk of does not appear.

        This fragment doesn't really explain how it is supposed to work
        and why it works in opposite direction when I try it. Still,
        thank you for mentioning it. Perhaps one day I'll read that
        entire chapter and find out the details.

        73,
        F

        On Sun, 24 Nov 2024, 19:53 Victor Rosenthal 4X6GP,
        <k2vco.vic@gmail.com <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com>> wrote:

            ARRL Handbook, 2010 ed.,  17.9.5 (p 17.27):

            "A third possibility is the use of an additional inductance
            connected in
            series between the tube and the tuning capacitor. In
            conjunction with
            the Cout of the tube, the added inductor acts as an L
            network to
            transform the impedance at the input of the pi-L network up
            to the
            2200-ohm load resistance needed by the tube. ... Since the
            impedance at
            the input of the main pi-L matching network is reduced, the
            loaded Q for
            the total capacitance actually in the circuit is lower. With
            lower Q,
            the circulating RF currents are lower, and thus tank losses
            are lower."

            They continue with calculations using an 0.5 uh inductor.
            They show that
            the required total capacitance at 29.7 MHz in the example is
            67 pf as
            opposed to 36 pf without the inductor, which is easier to
            realize with a
            practical capacitor.

            This applies equally to a plain pi (not pi-L) network,
            obviously.

            73,
            Victor, 4X6GP
            Rehovot, Israel
            Formerly K2VCO
            CWops no. 5
            http://www.qsl.net/k2vco <http://www.qsl.net/k2vco>

            On 24/11/2024 20:08, flynth@gmail.com
            <mailto:flynth@gmail.com> wrote:
             > Could you let me know where is it discussed, please? (the
            ham radio
             > handbook by Orr? I've read it multiple times, but I don't
            remember that).
             > tube and
             > I've added a coil in series that was stretched/compressed
            between 700nH
             > and 1.2uH.same as in SimSmith simulation it only moved
            the resonance of
             > the entire pi network LOWER. The opposite of where I need
            to go.
             >
             > I start thinking I simply built the whole thing wrong as
            there is no
             > hope whatsoever of getting it to work on 10m with
            connections that are
             > 10cm long (one between the blocking cap and the plate
            cap, the other
             > between the plate cap and the load coil). I have 20~30pF
            of extra
             > capacitance somewhere. I should've made all these
            connections 2-3cm
             > long, but i didn't realise it matters at such "low"
            frequencies as under
             > 30MHz.
             >
             > The whole thing resonates at 25MHz with no plate cap at
            all and with
             > load coil on 0.9uH (where it should be for 29Mhz). The
            tube and socket
             > is 27uF. SimSmith tells me I must have another 25pF
            somewhere to get
             > this result.
             >
             > I'll probably try using thinner wire (less capacitance)
            as a last idea.
             >
             >
             > On Sun, 24 Nov 2024, 16:57 Steve Thompson via Amps,
            <amps@contesting.com <mailto:amps@contesting.com>
             > <mailto:amps@contesting.com
            <mailto:amps@contesting.com>>> wrote:
             >
             >     You certainly don't want a small series C anywhere at
            the tube end of
             >     the matching, it pushes everything in the wrong
            direction and you end up
             >     with higher loaded Q.
             >
             >     Steve G8GSQ
             >
             >
             > Thank you Steve, yes, it was a silly idea, I simulated it
            and it looked
             > nothing like it should.
             >
             > 73,
             > F
             >
             >
             > On Sun, 24 Nov 2024, 16:04 Victor Rosenthal,
            <k2vco.vic@gmail.com <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com>
             > <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com
            <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com>>> wrote:
             >
             >     No, the coil goes in series with the input to the pi
            network.
             >     I misspoke when I said it increases the impedance of
            the tube. The
             >     impedance doesn't change; you are just converting the
            pi network
             >     into one that can match the impedance of the tube to
            50 ohms with a
             >     smaller tuning capacitor. You can think of the coil
            as canceling
             >     some of the tube's output capacity if you wish.
             >     This is a well-known method of dealing with the
            problem of excessive
             >     Q on the higher bands. It's discussed in the
            handbooks and I've used
             >     it myself with good results.
             >
             >     Victor 4X6GP
             >
             >     On Sun, Nov 24, 2024, 16:48 <flynth@gmail.com
            <mailto:flynth@gmail.com>
             >     <mailto:flynth@gmail.com <mailto:flynth@gmail.com>>>
            wrote:
             >
             >         I do understand the coil goes on the input of the
            pi tank(on the
             >         tube side), but the series coil increases the
            impedance of the
             >         tube as source (as seen by the pi tank). So it
            goes in the
             >         opposite direction I need I believe.
             >
             >         Did you mean the extra coil is connected in
            parallel? This I can
             >         understand. This will effectively lower the tube
            output
             >         impedance and should allow the use of higher
            capacitance.
             >
             >         I'm just trying to simulate this with NecSIM
            right now. It seems
             >         like it might work.
             >
             >         Is this what you were proposing?
             >
             >         On Sun, 24 Nov 2024, 15:39 Victor Rosenthal,
             >         <k2vco.vic@gmail.com <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com>
            <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com>>>
            wrote:
             >
             >             I'm suggesting an L-pi not a pi-L. A pi-L is
            useful to
             >             reduce needed output capacitor size and to
            reduce harmonics,
             >             particularly on lower frequencies. A pi-L has
            an additional
             >             inductor at the output of the network; I'm
            suggesting one at
             >             the input.
             >             I think I recall a place in the spreadsheet
            for this. But I
             >             found it hard to do this analytically. You
            can get it into
             >             the ballpark, but then you have to adjust the
            inductance
             >             experimentally.
             >
             >             Victor 4X6GP
             >
             >             On Sun, Nov 24, 2024, 14:56 <flynth@gmail.com
            <mailto:flynth@gmail.com>
             >             <mailto:flynth@gmail.com
            <mailto:flynth@gmail.com>>> wrote:
             >
             >                 I'm not sure I'm using this spreadsheet
            correctly, but
             >                 the Pi-L values for the plate capacitance
            are lower than
             >                 normal Pi values. I'm attaching the
            spreadsheet, but
             >                 also pasting a screenshot using default
            settings as I'm
             >                 not sure if such attachments are allowed
            here.
             >
             >                 On default settings the pi-L circuit also
            shows much
             >                 lower capacitance for the Pi-L network:
             >
             >
             >                 73,
             >                 F
             >
             >                 On Sun, 24 Nov 2024, 12:07 ,
            <flynth@gmail.com <mailto:flynth@gmail.com>
             >                 <mailto:flynth@gmail.com
            <mailto:flynth@gmail.com>>> wrote:
             >
             >                     Thank you for your reply. I'll
            calculate this. I was
             >                     considering adding a small (12pF)
            series capacitor
             >                     that would be shorted on all other
            bands than 10m.
             >
             >                     Are there some hidden dangers with
            this idea? It
             >                     seems it would allow me to work on
            10m with minimal
             >                     modifications.
             >
             >                     73,
             >                     F
             >
             >                     On Sat, 23 Nov 2024, 15:32 Victor
            Rosenthal 4X6GP,
             >                     <k2vco.vic@gmail.com
            <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com> <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com
            <mailto:k2vco.vic@gmail.com>>>
             >                     wrote:
             >
             >                         The Q is too HIGH, not low. 15 pf
            minimum
             >                         capacity on the vacuum cap is
             >                         high, when you add in the output
            capacitance of
             >                         the tube and the strays.
             >
             >                         I suggest you think about adding
            a small
             >                         inductance (1 uh or less,
             >                         usually) between the plate and
            the pi net input,
             >                         converting it to an
             >                         L-pi network. This is discussed
            in the ARRL and
             >                         Bill Orr handbooks. It
             >                         is also in the G3SED spreadsheet.
            That will
             >                         increase the output
             >                         impedance of the tube so as to
            make it easier to
             >                         match with a practical
             >                         pi network.
             >
             >                         If you do this, be sure to check
            carefully for
             >                         VHF parasitics, since it
             >                         can introduce instability.
             >
             >                         73,
             >                         Victor, 4X6GP
             >                         Rehovot, Israel
             >                         Formerly K2VCO
             >                         CWops no. 5
             > http://www.qsl.net/k2vco <http://www.qsl.net/k2vco>
            <http://www.qsl.net/k2vco <http://www.qsl.net/k2vco>>
             >
             >                         On 23/11/2024 15:57,
            flynth@gmail.com <mailto:flynth@gmail.com>
             >                         <mailto:flynth@gmail.com
            <mailto:flynth@gmail.com>> wrote:
             >                          > Hi,
             >                          >
             >                          > I've built a GU-43B based amp
            roughly
             >                         following Pa0fri design (shown here
             >                          >
             >
            https://pa0fri.home.xs4all.nl/Lineairs/Frinear1500/FRI1500eng.htm 
<https://pa0fri.home.xs4all.nl/Lineairs/Frinear1500/FRI1500eng.htm> 
<https://pa0fri.home.xs4all.nl/Lineairs/Frinear1500/FRI1500eng.htm 
<https://pa0fri.home.xs4all.nl/Lineairs/Frinear1500/FRI1500eng.htm>>)
             >                          >
             >                          > My modifications are: better
            PSU for the
             >                         screen(thanks to this group) , no
             >                          > 160m band therefore no toroid
            switched in
             >                         series with the Pi tank coil. And
             >                          > instead of a 1500pf variable
            load cap I have
             >                         20~600pf variable plus a
             >                          > selection of extra
            capacitances on a switch.
             >                         My plate cap is a 15~500pF
             >                          > vacuum Jennings. Connections
            between
             >                         components are made with 0.2mm x 12mm
             >                          > wide coil strip and where not
            possible (coil
             >                         taps to band switch) 3mm
             >                          > copper wire is used.
             >                          >
             >                          > The coil is wound with 6mm
            coper pipe and has
             >                         two diameters. First is
             >                          > approximately 40mm, has only 6
            or so turns
             >                         stretched to 80mm, then 12 turns
             >                          > on 90mm (if I remember
            correctly) quite close
             >                         to eachother (2~3mm apart).
             >                          > I've used my NanoVNA to set up
            coil taps for
             >                         the bands. The entire coil
             >                          > measures 9uF at 100kHz and
            works great at
             >                         80m. Anode voltage is 3200V
             >                          > falling to 3050V under load.
             >                          >
             >                          > Here is the problem. I suspect
            due to stray
             >                         inductances of 3mm wire used to
             >                          > connect coil taps the first
            tap (under 1 uH
             >                         if u remember correctly) is
             >                          > only half a turn from coil
            start. I didn't
             >                         think this will cause a problem,
             >                          > but I'm seeing this:
             >                          >
             >                          > On all bands up to and
            including 20m if I
             >                         increase my drive power to about
             >                          > 10W (CW) the amplifier
            consumes near 0.45A of
             >                         current (measured with a
             >                          > normal amp meter and a panel
            meter). It puts
             >                         out somewhere in the region of
             >                          > 1000W. If I increase the drive
            slightly it
             >                         goes up to 0.6A and power out is
             >                          > 1500W.
             >                          >
             >                          > The screen current is zero
            until drive power
             >                         reaches about 10W then it goes
             >                          > negative to go back to zero at
            about 13W. If
             >                         I increased it more it would
             >                          > increase rapidly and activate
            the protection.
             >                         This is on all bands up to
             >                          > 20m.
             >                          >
             >                          > Today I tried 10m for the very
            first time. I
             >                         tuned normally (peaking power
             >                          > with plate cap at very low
            drive, then
             >                         increase power until I see screen
             >                          > current move or it gets to
            target anode
             >                         current and set the load cap just
             >                          > below the peak power, same
            place screen
             >                         current is a little bit positive).
             >                          >
             >                          > But, I increase the drive, the
            amplifier
             >                         consumes the required current, but
             >                          > output power is very low. Only
            about 200W at
             >                         0.6A. Tuning behaves normally
             >                          > as well as screen current. I
            tried to see if
             >                         something is heating up with a
             >                          > thermal camera, but nothing is.
             >                          >
             >                          > I suspect the problem is
            somewhere in my PI
             >                         circuit. Perhaps the Q factor
             >                          > is too low?
             >                          >
             >                          > Can someone, please give me
            some tips where
             >                         to look in troubleshooting
             >                          > this? Is there some way I can
            verify this
             >                         issues as existing/resolved with
             >                          > a nanovna?
             >                          >
             >                          > Also, my drive power and input
            match is fine
             >                         as my driving rig has a built
             >                          > in ATU. I see a confirmation
            of the low
             >                         output power on my station monitor
             >                          > (oscilloscope like device).
             >                          >
             >                          > Many thanks,
             >                          > F
             >                          >
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            <mailto:Amps@contesting.com> <mailto:Amps@contesting.com
            <mailto:Amps@contesting.com>>
             >                          >
             > http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps
            <http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps>
            <http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps
            <http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps>>
             >
>  _______________________________________________
             >                         Amps mailing list
             > Amps@contesting.com <mailto:Amps@contesting.com>
            <mailto:Amps@contesting.com <mailto:Amps@contesting.com>>
             > http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps
            <http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps>
            <http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps
            <http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps>>
             >


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