TenTec
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: [TenTec] Voltage drop

To: Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment <tentec@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [TenTec] Voltage drop
From: Ken Brown <ken.d.brown@hawaiiantel.net>
Reply-to: ken.d.brown@hawaiiantel.net, Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment <tentec@contesting.com>
Date: Wed, 05 Mar 2008 19:10:06 -1000
List-post: <tentec@contesting.com">mailto:tentec@contesting.com>
Hi Bill,

I know you already got an answer to this question, and I just couldn't 
resist giving another more general answer.

Overall, I would say the answer is no. You really have to know more 
about the radio and the power supply before you can determine how much 
voltage drop is acceptable. I know that you posted your question on the 
Ten-Tec reflector, but I am going to answer more generally than just for 
Ten-Tec radios. You need to know the range of DC voltage that the radio 
can operate within, and you need to know the current draw under various 
conditions of the radio operation. You also need to know what the 
voltage produced by the power supply is, or can be adjusted to. Then you 
need to use ohms law to figure out what the voltage drop will be at the 
various current draws the radio will have in various modes of operation, 
for a given resistance of wire. Unfortunately not all radio 
manufacturers provide all of that information.

Lets suppose you have a radio that can work between 11 VDC and 15 VDC. 
Suppose it draws 20 Amperes during key down CW. You could use a 15 volt 
power supply and long or skinny wires that have a total resistance of 
0.2 ohms (that would be 0.1 ohm on each of the two wires), and still 
keep the voltage within the range the radio can work in. This is sort of 
an extreme example, and definitely not a recommendation, just a possibility.

Once upon a time when undersea cables were coaxial, and there were 
amplifiers along the way, DC power was sent into the cable to power the 
amplifiers. AC would have been more of a noise (hum) problem with the 
communications circuits on the cable. Several hundred or even a couple 
thousand volts DC were sent at the shore termination facility, in order 
to provide 50 or 100 VDC to an amplifier out in the middle of the ocean.

You can have a lot of voltage drop if you engineer the system to work 
that way. Just be sure when the current is low, and the I * R drop 
lowest, the voltage delivered to the load is not to high, AND when the 
current is the highest it is ever going to be and the I * R drop is the 
highest it is going to be, the voltage at the load is still high enough.

DE N6KB
> Is there a rule of thumb for maximum voltage drop through the primary DC  
> power lead.
>
> 73
> BillHarris w7kxb
>
>
>   

_______________________________________________
TenTec mailing list
TenTec@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/tentec

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>