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Re: [Amps] MOSFET amp filtering - was: auto-tune

To: Amps group <amps@contesting.com>, Bill Turner <dezrat@outlook.com>
Subject: Re: [Amps] MOSFET amp filtering - was: auto-tune
From: Catherine James <catherine.james@att.net>
Reply-to: Catherine James <catherine.james@att.net>
Date: Mon, 12 Dec 2016 13:32:16 +0000 (UTC)
List-post: <amps@contesting.com">mailto:amps@contesting.com>
I hear a lot of recommendations here for antennas that are flat across the band 
and very close to SWR of 1:1 to keep solid-state amps happy.  That is 
completely unrealistic on the low bands.

I have to re-tune my 160 meter dipole for even small excursions of a few tens 
of kHz.  A cage dipole would be broader-banded, but that is difficult to build 
and install, especially for a 270 foot long antenna that hangs in the trees.  I 
certainly couldn't put one up in the treetops where my current wire dipole 
lives, as it would get all tangled in the branches.

So much of discussion and recommendation around antennas seems to unconsciously 
assume that we are talking about the high bands.  I've lost count of the number 
of discussions where someone asked for a reco on an HF amp, and was told over 
and over, "don't start with an amp, improve your antenna system, put up a beam, 
etc."

At this point in the cycle, I am spending more and more time on 160, less on 20 
and 40, and essentially none at all on 10 and 15. Few hams can put up a beam on 
the bands below 20.  The longer the wavelength, the wider a given band will be 
as a fraction of that wavelength, and the less broad-banded the antenna will be 
without tuning. Tuning is a fact of life, and amps are more important on bands 
where the ham cannot have a rotatable directional antenna.  

160 has been amazing lately.  10 doesn't appear to have opened at all for the 
contest last weekend, at least not here in New England. And 160 is where you 
really, really want an amp!

73,
Cathy
N5WVR

--------------------------------------------
On Mon, 12/12/16, Bill Turner <dezrat@outlook.com> wrote:
 
> Whatever "tuning" is needed is for the antenna, not the amplifier. If
> the antenna itself is broadbanded, no tuning is required at all. 
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