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On May 26, 11:50*am, Richard Clark wrote:
On Wed, 26 May 2010 04:50:30 -0700 (PDT), Keith Dysart wrote: a conjugate match does result in a situation where altering the load will reduce the power transfer ... We are still left with the puzzle of why the observations documented in Reflections report a reduction in power transfer when the load is changed in either direction. Hi Keith, Stripping away everything that you offer as objections to what is not in Walt's premise (I cannot vouch for his attempts to explain the universality of it), your statements come into conflict. If you offer you find a puzzle about measurements, then that is simply researched at the bench instead of in expansive wanderings in myriad qualifications. *Do you have documented measurements under initial conditions identical to Walt's that run counter to Walt's quantitative results? I suspect not, or we would be talking about competing bench results instead. *This would be a more productive and genuine debate seeking explanation for what you describe as the "puzzle." * Barring quantitative evidence, anything that continues this rag-chew is a simple example of "modeling is doomed to succeed." 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Hi Keith, Sorry, OM, but you still misunderstand various aspects of RF power amp operation. First, the power supply is not the limiting factor concerning plate current. The grid drive is what determines the plate current, and thus the output power. Second, the tank circuit is an energy storage device that isolates the non-linear input from the linear output. That the output is linear is because the voltage and current are in phase at the output of the tank circuit. The effect of the energy storage of the tank results in the tank becoming the source of the energy appearing at the output. Third, the action of plate resistance Rp occurs only in the formation of RL, and has no further effect on any action downstream of the input of the tank circuit. Thus, it has no bearing on the development of the conjugate match that occurs at the junction of the tank output and the input of the transmission line. Fourth, as I said earlier, the the action of the bench power supply that you presented in no way models the action of the RF power amplifier. Furthermore, you are incorrect when you say that when varying the load in either direction causing the power deliver to decrease there is no conjugate match. In saying what you did violates the theorem of Maximum Transfer of Power. Fifth, as I stated earlier, when the reactance appearing at the input of the load (the transmission line with reflections) is canceled by the opposite reactance introduced by the pi-network tuning capacitor, the output impedance of the source (the tank circuit) is the conjugate of the line-input impedance. If you cannot accept this as fact you have a problem. Sixth, your understanding of the effect of the reflected wave on the source wave is flawed. The non-linearity of the plate current when the conduction time is less than 360° has no relation to the action downstream of the input to the tank circuit, because from that point on the voltage current relationship is linear. If you cannot accept this as fact you have still another problem. Seventh, your belief that because there is a conjugate match at the output of the tank there must be a conjugate match at the input of the tank is also not true. The effect of the energy storage in the tank isolates the non-linearity af the input from the linear operation at the output, permitting a conjugate match at the output, while not allowing it to occur at the input. These seven comments are born out (proven) by the results of many measurements I made using laboratory grade instruments, HP and General Radio. If you check my record as a professional electrical engineer regarding the measurements I've made that led to successful hardware flying on various Earth-orbiting platforms, you must accept the validity of the measurements I made on RF power amplifiers that prove my position. As I said earlier, no one but you has considered my position on this subject incorrect. Therefore, if you cannot agree with the comments I made above, but still consider my statements in Reflections flawed, then there is no point in my making any further comments. I hope someday you'll finally understand what's really happening within the RF amplifier. Walt Maxwell, W2DU |
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