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On Jun 12, 11:56*am, K7ITM wrote:
On Jun 12, 8:17*am, Richard Fry wrote: 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? No, not at all. *It is important to realize that a real source is NOT necessarily like either the Thevenin or the Norton equivalent. *The Thevenin and Norton equivalents, when discussed in any respectable text, will be noted to behave exactly like any other real linear source with respect to the load, but NOT necessarily with respect to the source itself, and in particular with respect to source efficiency and dissipation. For example: *I can, at least theoretically, build a switching power supply (a source) which measures its output voltage and current and adjusts the voltage down by 50 volts for each amp that's drawn from it. *Because it is always operating as a switching supply with very high efficiency, even when it's loaded so the output voltage is half the zero-current output voltage, it's not behaving internally like a Thevenin equivalent, even though it has a 50 ohm output resistance. 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 As Wim says, the conjugate-matched output impedance is guaranteed only over a very narrow range of conditions. *Specifically, it's for the condition where you can't adjust the load impedance in any direction without lowering the power delivered to the load. *For a power output stage with a tank that can tune both resistance and reactance (such as a pi network), that should be equivalent to adjusting the pi network to maximize the power delivered to the load with a particular fixed set of bias/drive conditions for that output stage. But why would I necessarily want to operate the output stage that way? *What if I'm providing enough grid drive and plate voltage to my 6146 that it's capable of outputting 150 watts (class C), but if I were to tune up the output matching network to get that much output power, the tube's life would be significantly shortened because the plate dissipation would be too high? *What if I'm operating it class AB, with low enough drive so that the plate voltage and current change only by small percentages? Or to me, more to the point: *why would I care what the source impedance of my transmitter is? *With the power at the wall outlet in my house, I expect a nearly constant voltage, and have no intention of loading it with a "conjugate match." *I don't know WHAT its source resistance is, exactly, but I know it's much lower than the loads I put on it. *With an electric motor, I have no intention of putting a load in excess of the motor's rating on it, for fear of burning up the motor, even though I know that for short periods the motor can deliver quite a bit more output power than its nameplate rating. *With a switching power supply, same thing: *I don't load it to the point of significant drop in output voltage. *All I want from ANY of these, including the RF power amplifier, is the ability to deliver the expected power to the rated load. In the instrumentation systems I deal with professionally, there are times I care very much about source impedance. *With respect to ham transmitters and power amplifiers, though, I just can't get excited about caring that much what the source impedance is. *The point of the amplifier or transmitter is to deliver power to my antenna system, and the source impedance it represents is irrelevant to that task. Cheers, Tom Hello Richard Fry, I quote a sentence from your previous post: "Would that not be evidence that the amplifier source impedance necessarily is lower than the load impedance?" What you have said above is the key to the concern over the output resistance of a Clsss C amplifier being non-dissipative. What seems to be universally misunderstood is that there are really two separate resistances in the operation of these amps; one, the cathode-to-plate resistance, which is the dissipative resistance Rpd that accounts for all the heat, due to the electrons striking the plate; and two, the real output resistance that appears at the output of the pi-network, the resistance comprised of the voltage-current ratio E/R. I am speaking only of tube amps using an adjustable pi-network in the output. Due to the energy storage in the pi-network the output of the amp is inherently isolated from the upstream non-linear portion, thus the output is linear. One of the myths concerning the RF amp is that it cannot have efficiency greater than 50% because half of the power is dissipated in the source resistance. This would be correct if the output source resistance was dissipative, like in a classical generator. But in the real RF xmtr this is not true. Returning now to your quote above, your reference to the source impedance (resistance Rpd) is actually the plate-to-cathode resistance, the dissipative resistance, which is less than the output resistance R = E/I appearing at the terminals of the pi-network. I must add that when the pi-network has been adjusted to deliver all the available power at any particular grid-drive level, the output resistance of the network equals the load resistance, but not necessarily 50 ohms, i.e., whatever the load resistance might be. If you have doubts concerning the conditions I stated above, I invite you to review Chapter 19 in Reflections 3, which is available in two parts on my web page at www.w2du.com, as the first part appears in Reflections 2 and the second part appears in 'Preview of Chapters in Reflections 3'. In that chapter I use an example taken directly from Terman's 'Radio Engineers Handbook'. You will note that the dissipative resistance Rpd (3315.6 ohms) is less than the output resistance (6405 ohms) obtained from the E/I relationship appearing at the output This example verifies the explanation in the text. In addition, I also invite you to review the portion of the chapter appearing in the 'Preview Chapters in Reflections 3', in which I report additional measurements that offer additional proof that the output source resistance is non-dissipative. The numbers prove it to be true. Walt, W2DU |
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