
August 30th 04, 03:10 PM
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On Mon, 30 Aug 2004 08:42:27 -0500, (Richard
Harrison) wrote:
Gary Schwartz wrote:
"For cooling, copper tubing is used as the RF conductor (skin effect
only) and water is pumped through the inside."
That`s exactly the structure of the final amplifier tank coil of the
100KW GE watercooled shortwave transmitters used at RFE. The coil was
silver plated. We distilled our own cooling water and the water
circulation system was connected by Saran tubing. Though many KV were
applied to the plates, d-c leakage was insignificant.
Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI
Almost like I have seen high powered RF coils like this. ;-)
I've seen them, used them, and fixed them. I think the biggest system
I worked on was a mere 25 or 30 kV. Not broadcast, but plasma
generating process equipment.
Only so many reasoanble ways to solve this problem.
Your water cooling does need to be able to handle the heat generated
by significant mismatches, not just ideal operation. It is bad luck to
melt parts of your cooling system.
Happy trails,
Gary (net.yogi.bear)
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at the 51st percentile of ursine intelligence
Gary D. Schwartz, Needham, MA, USA
Please reply to: garyDOTschwartzATpoboxDOTcom
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