On Tue, 09 Dec 2003 19:12:21 -0800, Frank Gilliland
wrote:
In , wrote:
The power demands of an SSB amp are roughly equivalent to an audio amp simply
because of the way SSB works (low input signal, low output power; high input
signal, high output power). The current draw follows the audio almost perfectly.
Caps -do- help for SSB.
Not even close. SSB prefers compression and HI-FI abhors it.
The difference between the two is a least 6db, therefore SSB takes
4 times the capacitance to make the same difference that a HI-FI
could show by using these caps.
The DC input power follows the audio input, compressed or not. Is that concept
too difficult for you to comprehend?
Trying to create a divergence away from the truth?
The truth is not gained by equating DC input to output. The truth is
gained by comparing SSB audio compression levels to that of HI- FI
audio compression levels.
The example (dx1600) requires at least 6 farads to make a difference.
Where's the math, Tnom?
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