[Amps] CB Amps or full spectrum???

Peter Chadwick g3rzp at g3rzp.wanadoo.co.uk
Wed Oct 10 12:55:48 EDT 2007


> If you look at the tank circuit of these amps, you see a pi network that is usually no different than any other amp, except the coil is small turns wise because it is for 11 meters (and close to 10 meters as well). So what kind of "filtering" are you talking about?
If the pi network is not different than, say, a 30L-1 or an SB 200 or any other amp with a pi network, why would harmonics be any more of a problem than with other amps?<
Firstly, if you do the sums for a Class AB tube amplifier with the usual Q values, you'll see that you don't meet either the FCC requirements for harmonics (46dB) nor the Radio Regulations  requirements, which are 4 dB tighter at 50dB. Which is why the manufacturers these days use a Pi-L network. Not that anyone worries too much about existing equipment, which from memory, is, at least as far as the Radio Regs are concerned, 'grandfathered' until 2012 anyway. The solid state CB amplifiers, besides being pretty awful on IMD, usually have minimal harmonic filtering. In fact, you can, in a solid state push pull amp, have reasonable IMD, but a 3rd harmonic only 13 dB down. So this is why you need decent low pass filters. Now some transistors, presented with the input impedance of a filter at the 3rd harmonic, happily oscillate. The Swan 100MX had a tendency to do this on 15metres with some antenna loads.
Biasing the 12 volt transistors is fun anyway. From a DC viewpoint, you'd like a constant current source of bias that reduced as the transistors got warm and the beta went up. But a constant current source is ideally an infinite impedance, and as soon as you apply RF, the rectification then alters the bias point. So in practice, you have to end up with a constant voltage, very low impedance bias source, which has to fall in voltage as the die temperature goes up at approximately 2mV/degree C plus a bit more to allow for the increase in beta as temperature goes up. Add to this the fact that the RF saturation voltage of the 12 volt transistor isn't that negligible, so the available voltage swing is not quite so big as you would hope - quite likely down to about 20 volts peak to peak at the best - and you can start seeing why the CB amps are so dreadful. At 100 watts, with 20v p-p, which is about 6 volts rms, the load impedance is down to around 0.36 ohms, so losses start to become a major problem. So this why people go to 24 or 48 volts and even better, to FETs, which tend to be a bit more linear anyway. You can use a constant current source of bias with pure Class A, but the bias must not change when the RF drive is applied - this is done in integrated circuits with driver stages on board for linear cellphone applications, but not above about +8 or +9dBm output power.
To avoid the instability problems, you need to look at the S parameters at the harmonic frequencies and do either a Linville or a Stern stability criteria calculation when loaded with the  impedance that the filters present at those frequencies, as well as an all phases VSWR  of whatever your worst case VSWR is at the operating frequency. At least, this is what proper designers do, not the CB amp makers, most of whom, I suspect, have never even heard of Linville or Stern or stability criteria! The exercise also tells you how much margin you have on the stability. There are stability criteria equations for tubes, too.
73
Peter G3RZP


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