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Old June 7th 08, 05:01 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
SpamHog SpamHog is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Sep 2006
Posts: 39
Default voltage comparator for MOSFET driver in HF CW TX?

On Jun 6, 2:00*pm, NM0S
wrote:

If you are running Class-E, changing the
duty of the drive signal will not affect your
output power significantly, but will destroy
your efficiency if you deviate from 50% duty.



Thank you, Dave!

My understanding was that duty cycle would set
output even in class E.


I like to gather silicon from the recycling heap,
and although I have IRF510's, my current victim is
a SK2545, wrung out of a PSU, Pd=40W, Vdss=600V,
and Ciss=1.3nF (!) not easy to stress - actually,
that's exactly why I opted for that class of
device, only partly fit for purpose, but
forgiving, and easy to find.

I already wrung several watts of RF out of at
10MHz it with decidedly ugly and bad drivers which
I did not manage to run in switch mode. They
heated up a lot, but the final got sufficiently
"overdriven" to partly go switchmode, and did not
heat up that much.

I have a totempole ready with complementary BJTs
from a printer driver (2SA2037 / 2SC5694, 60V, 7A,
300MHz), they need .85Vbe to go into saturation.

Ample current is needed to quickly charge and
discharge the MOSFET gate, I reckon it'd take ~
250mA, hence the driver'd better be switching too
rather than overheat in linear mode. So, duty
cycle aside, I need a clean square wave.

MOSFET gate must be swung from 3V to 10V, driver
bases need 8.5Vpp.

I could use a 74HC240 line driver for VXO and amp,
enough current for a IFR510, surely not for Ciss
1000pF, but OK for the complementary pair.

Yet a comparator would indeed be ideal. With it I
could one day also futz with duty and see by
myself what happens... [read John 20:29].

Now, off to read US patent 7092269! :-) After
all, I am shooting for class D, not E. I want to
design a frequency flexible matching and filter
network to cover many bands with few components,
perhaps resorting to old fashioned variable
capacitors, E would be way too complicated anyway,
and efficient output throttling would be nice to
have.



Does anyone have a suggestion for a common and
inexpensive type that works well throughout HF?