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On Jun 12, 9:44*am, Wimpie wrote:
A real class C amplifier with very small conduction angle has efficiency 50% when optimally tuned. Would that not be evidence that the amplifier source impedance necessarily is lower than the load impedance? When it operates at the transition of current/voltage saturation is can show 50 Ohms output impedance for very small change in load impedance. But as soon as the load mismatch is above about VSWR = 1.05…1.1, output VSWR/impedance of the amplifier changes rapidly. For some additional input -- I have taken part in factory tests of high-power Class C single-tube/tuned cavity FM broadcast transmitters driving 50-ohm test loads measured to have 1.03VSWR, showing a DC input to r-f output efficiency of the PA to be in excess of 80% -- including the loss in the harmonic filter. Load power was measured using calorimetric methods. In fact, 80% PA efficiency is the published spec for this transmitter line as long as load VSWR relative to 50 ohms is 1.7:1 or less (any phase angle). Those results don't appear to be fitting very well with the idea that the tx source impedance can be ~50 ohms for loads with low VSWR. RF |
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