Topband: DX-100 adventure contiunued
Bruce
k1fz at myfairpoint.net
Wed Jan 8 15:51:26 EST 2014
Hi Charlie,
A little cross multiplication shows that if you had 600 volts when the
primary is 110 VAC, then with 130 primary volts you should have 709 Volts.
A larger increase takes place between choke input and capacitor input.
(depends upon the size of the capacitor) Most likely a shorted choke or a
miswiring problem. (Was the transmitter a kit?)
Best to check the choke resistance.
Does both ends of the choke have the same resistance back to the rectifier
filament connection ? You should see the choke resistance as a difference.
73
Bruce-K1FZ
----- Original Message -----
From: "Charlie Cunningham" <charlie-cunningham at nc.rr.com>
To: "'Bill Cromwell'" <wrcromwell at gmail.com>
Cc: "'topband'" <topband at contesting.com>; "'Tom W8JI'" <w8ji at w8ji.com>
Sent: Wednesday, January 08, 2014 3:14 PM
Subject: Re: Topband: DX-100 adventure contiunued
> Hi, Bill
>
> Well, I suspect that the light bulbs may be a "tip-off". The do make 130
> volt bulbs for folks with line voltage that runs a bit high, but that
> doesn't help you DX-100 or other appliances. Sounds like you need to get
> you power provider to look into you line voltage and regulation. Also, if
> they have power-factor correction capacitors connected on those
> distribution
> feeders in the winter-time when the power factor is less inductive and
> closer to unity, that can result in soe increase in line voltage in the
> winter time. GL!
>
> 73,
> Charlie, K4OTV
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Bill Cromwell [mailto:wrcromwell at gmail.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, January 08, 2014 2:45 PM
> To: Charlie Cunningham
> Cc: 'Tom W8JI'; 'topband'
> Subject: Re: Topband: DX-100 adventure contiunued
>
> On 01/08/2014 01:36 PM, Charlie Cunningham wrote:
>> Hi, Bill
>>
>> I was also going to ask if you have a choke input filter -or if you could
>> change the PS filter configuration to choke input to help a bit with the
> HV.
>>
>>
>> Also, check your line voltage - especially at night when the load on the
>> electric grid drops. I've seen my 240 VAC here get up well past 265
>> volts
>> at night! Use a trusted, well calibrated volt meter and take some voltage
>> readings at different times of day to get a feel for what the line
>> regulation looks like! Note that a 10 % increase in line voltage would
>> increase that HV from 825 VDC to over 900 VDC. 10 % high line is not
>> really unusual. Finally, you can check with your local PUC - there are
>> regulatory limits to how much the AC line is permitted to vary - but I'd
>> start with the power provider first. Maybe they need to drop your
>> distribution feeder down a tap at the substation. Excessive voltage is
> hard
>> on lots of things around your house besides DX-100s! The utility can cme
> out
>> and put a recording voltmeter on your line for a while to see what's
>> going
>> on, if you complain about excessive line voltage.
>>
>> GL!
>> 73,
>> Charlie, K4OTV
>>
> Hi Charlie,
>
> The DX-100 High voltage is choke input by design. I changed the low
> voltage supply to choke input as well and the rf stages are behaving
> very nicely with that. I already think my line is "high" and I'll take
> readings various times as you have suggested. Light bulbs don't seem to
> last very long here, either.
>
> Tom asked about bleeder current. I didn't try to measure it but I
> watched the high voltage decay to zero in a very few seconds when I
> switched it off with no 6146s in the sockets.
>
> 73,
>
> Bill KU8H
>
> _________________
> Topband Reflector Archives - http://www.contesting.com/_topband
>
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