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Roy Lewallen wrote:
This might shed a little light on the discussion. Consider a diode, forward biased by a 10 mA DC current source connected directly across it. The characteristics of this particular diode are such that the voltage is exactly 0.7 volt. What's the resistance of the diode? The lengthy discussion about tube plate resistance has muddled the DC operating point (equivalent to the diode DC bias) and the plate resistance, which is the plate's AC or dynamic resistance. They're related just the same as for the diode. And just like the diode, if you were to send an AC signal to the plate of a biased tube through a capacitor, you'd find an AC voltage and current which are in phase resulting in power being delivered to the tube, and an increase in plate dissipation in the amount of that power. Another fine example is a "negative resistance" device like a tunnel diode, gas discharge tube (neon bulb), or a free burning arc. Obviously, the arc dissipates power, but the V/I slope is negative. |
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