View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
Old September 14th 04, 02:56 AM
Tom Ring
 
Posts: n/a
Default

JGBOYLES wrote:

Hi,
I am contemplating a pep reading wattmeter so I can check the output of my HB
amplifier. Consequently, I am putting it right on the output of the amp. The
output of the amp should always see 50 ohms because it will be feeding either a
50 ohm dummy load, or an ATU tuned to 50 ohms. With that in mind, I am simply
using a resistive voltage divider, to get a voltage sample, and squaring it
with an AD633 multiplier. This seems like a simple, cheap way to get watt
info. assuming you will always be working into a near 50 ohm resistive load.
Anyone see any reason why this will not give you a pretty good indication of
your power output? I realize that the load may not always be exactly 50 ohms,
and that there are losses in the ATU.
The reason I have not tried getting a current sample and using the
conventional VI COS Theta with the multiplier is due to the additional
complexity of circuitry. It is also difficult to get accurate current samples
over a wide frequency range. By making everything resistive it somewhat takes
the frequency dependency out of the problem. Thanks.
73 Gary N4AST


Good luck getting a straight answer here, and I won't try one, because
every technical answer related to power transfer is always wrong by
someone elses measure on this list.

That being said, I'd do it the way you propose, since it's simple and
repeatable, and probably close enough.

tom
K0TAR