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On Jun 13, 12:05*am, Jim Lux wrote:
Ham applications in any case are kind of an odd thing, efficiency-wise, since the limit is on RF power at the transmitter output connector. Jim, That's not the case in the UK. The licence conditions specify ".... power supplied to the antenna by a transmitter ...." Steve G3TXQ |
#2
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On Jun 13, 6:54*am, steveeh131047 wrote:
On Jun 13, 12:05*am, Jim Lux wrote: Ham applications in any case are kind of an odd thing, efficiency-wise, since the limit is on RF power at the transmitter output connector. Jim, That's not the case in the UK. The licence conditions specify ".... power supplied to the antenna by a transmitter ...." Steve G3TXQ How interesting, so in both VK and UK (mixing abbreviations).. the "reference plane" for the measurement is potentially "after" the transmission line. The 5kW Active Antenna Tuner lives! Here in the US, I'm sure the rule is interpreted the way it is because of the heritage of "1kW DC power to the final stage" rule, which in turn came from pre-ham radio rules for marine transmitters using sparkgaps, etc... It was simple change from measuring plate current/ voltage to hooking a power meter at the output connector. I wonder if anyone ever measured RF power on a non-50 ohm transmitter in an enforcement action? My father and grandfather both had stories, apocryphal perhaps, about clever hams having very large "exciters" that fed through a relatively low power "final stage"... using the final tube as a coupling capacitor, perhaps, with unity gain. |
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