All commercial cavity amps I saw, made by Siemens, R&S and Plisch provide
cooling a different way.
They pressurize the cavity with the blower and the only way for the air to
escape is through the anode fins of the tube sitting on top of the cavity
tubing and through the air outlet above the anode.
They provide also a bypass hose from the blower into the cathode chamber.
73
Peter
-----Original Message-----
From: amps-bounces@contesting.com [mailto:amps-bounces@contesting.com] On
Behalf Of Ian White GM3SEK
Sent: Samstag, 27. November 2010 17:54
To: amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] Tube Cooling..
Carl wrote:
>
>----- Original Message ----- From: "Ian White GM3SEK"
><gm3sek@ifwtech.co.uk>
>To: <amps@contesting.com>
>Sent: Saturday, November 27, 2010 3:06 AM
>Subject: Re: [Amps] Tube Cooling..
>
>
>> Carl wrote:
>>>
>>>Top down cooling is the norm in many coaxial cavities at VHF/UHF. My
>>>Collins 432 MHz military amp with a 2.75KW dissipation tetrode runs
>>>that way and it was used as an AM linear at 1000W out. A seperate small
>>>blower cools the input side. Due to the TX/RX relay and the coax going
>>>to the hardline and antennas I cant run it even close to its
capabilities.
>>>
>>>I'll also be using that method at 1296 with a pair of GI-7B's unless I
>>>decide to go with water cooling.
>>>
>>
>> Do you really mean "downward through the anode cooler", Carl?
>
>Yes
>
>Carl
>KM1H
So the entire anode cavity fills up with hot air...
Collins contributed many excellent ideas to the amplifier gene pool, but
that certainly wasn't one of them.
--
73 from Ian GM3SEK
http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek
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