It really doesn't matter how much power the amplifier is outputting. A
simple explanation is that a sample of the output is inversely fed back
and
combined with the input. As was mentioned before, this method has been
around for a long time. When you fly into an airport, the FAA radios that
the towers use have a Cartesian loop that does just this and these are 100
watt amps. You wouldn't normally need that on AM, but the current day FAA
radios were designed to send 64 QAM data, so linearity is a must.
It's not new or difficult, but it does cost more.
Jim - KR9U
-----Original Message-----
From: Topband [mailto:topband-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Richard
(Rick) Karlquist
Sent: Saturday, August 02, 2014 4:22 PM
To: Michael St. Angelo; jim@audiosystemsgroup.com; 'TopBand'
Subject: Re: Topband: Rig Comparisons
* The 2014 ARRL Technical Innovation Award went to Warren C.
Pratt, NR0V, of Santa Cruz, California. Pratt was cited for his
research leading to the development of PureSignal, "an adaptive
baseband pre-distortion algorithm used to improve the linearity of
amplifiers and reduce intermodulation distortion products emitted by
software-defined transmitters."
Mike N2MS
From the little I can glean from this description, it sounds like what
Agilent has been doing in test equipment since the 1990's. At Agilent, it
is only good for a 10 dB improvement and assumes a "memoryless"
amplifier. I don't see how pre-distortion is going to work on a high
power
linear that has a significant temperature and load impedance fluctuations.
Again, this is based on the summary given, so maybe there is more to it.
Rick N6RK
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