View Single Post
  #15   Report Post  
Old September 14th 07, 11:37 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
Chris Jones Chris Jones is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 19
Default HF finals from PC monitor boards?

wrote:


I already found something, thinking a bit sideways: these SS devices
impressed me more on the current- than on the voltage handling side.
I reckoned that scaling to higher powers was mostly done in current,
so I headed for a low power video unit I had: a long deceased bible-
sized 1970's TV + radio combo, with a 2" B/W screen. As suspected, I
found 2-3W low capacitance bipolars that could run into VHF... so
much so I had to bead them to keep them from producing spurs in my
ugly prototype.



On Jul 30, 11:37 pm, Chris Jones wrote:

2SB772 (PNP) and 2SD882 (NPN) (10-Watt 30V, 3A, fT80MHz)


The video amplifiers in a monitor have to be pretty fast for high
resolution
signals, and often these are discrete transistors to handle the power. I
got some 2SC2682 devices out of monitors - 180V, 3.2pF, fT=200MHz, 10W -
a few of these could make a useful amount of RF, I reckon.



Hmmmm.... I'll look harder. The pile of monitors is still there
gracing a hidden nook of my place.

W.r.t. the high definition requiring high frequency: KVM switches
often quote their bandwidth, which must match what^s required from a
given definition (if a KVM only quotes that, and not pixels, good luck
finding the equivalents). Bandwidths now run in the 200-300MHz range,
which is a good omen.

Where would such transistors be?

In the vicinity of the HV coil?

Or near the CRT cathode?


The video amplifiers are normally on the PCB that plugs directly onto the
back of the tube. The unusual thing about those transistors is that they
are moderately fast and also capable of handling quite high voltage.

Chris