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On Sun, 28 Sep 2008 22:21:49 -0700, "Sal M. Onella"
wrote: "Jeff Liebermann" wrote in message .. . My guess(tm) is that most modern HF radios can also safely operate into high VSWR loads, but suspect that manufacturers are also hesitant to guarantee such operation. Most manufacturers don't even specify a maximum VSWR and simply reduce power if excessive reverse power (usually 2:1 at full power) is detected. I have two HF radios, (Kenwood TS-120, TS-870) and I often observe the forward power climbing as I manually tune and reduce the reflected power. At first glance, this would seem to indicate the rig had previously throttled back its output in response to the consequences of a mismatch. That's normal. You're not measuring forward power. You're measuring RF voltage near the radio antenna connector. Once the load (coax + antenna) moves away from a 50 ohm resistive load, all bets are off as to what the voltage means. The same for a VSWR meter or watt meter installed between the radio and the coax cable to the antenna. Once the load gets away from 50 ohms, the voltage readings are not an indication of power. I never intentionally tune at anything more than a few watts, so perhaps the protection circuits operate at less than full power, too. The autotuner in the TS-870 uses about 10 watts. Yep. That's the way it should be done. The auto-tuners intentionally reduce power to prevent damage if they cross through some odd resonance that causes the voltage across some internal component to go sky high. Half the power, 1/4th the voltage. It could zap the tuner, but also zap the power amplfier if tuned at full power. That begs the question "What happens to a transmitter if one intentionally runs it with a high VSWR?" I don't know the full answer. Conventional wisdom is that the xmitter finals overheat. I've never seen much of that except with a tube power amplifier. With the power amps I worked on, the voltage across the transistor would either increase dramatically, or the current through the transistor would increase dramatically. Excess voltage would zap the junction. Excess current might cause overheating, but more commonly, would simply turn the xsistor wire bonds into fuses or melt the junction even before the heat sink could extract the heat. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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