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Henry Kolesnik wrote:
Richard This is in response to your answer of last night. Before going to bed I got out the book REFLECTIONS II by Walt Maxwell W2DU. I'm typing verbatim from page 2-2 and 23-1 for those who don't have the book.page 2-2 "Contrary to what many believe, it is not true that when a transmitter delivers power into a line with reflections, a returning wave sees an internal generator resistance as a dissipative load. Nor is the reflected wave converted to heat and, while at the same time damaging the final amplifier....the reflected power is entirely conserved...." from page 23-1 "One of the most serious misconceptions concerned reflected power reaching the tubes in the RF amplifier of the transmitter. The prevalent, but erroneous thinking was that the reflected power enters the amplifier, causing tube overheating and destruction. However, I dispelled this misconception in the above mentioned publications, using wave-mechanics treatment, discussed here in greater detail, by showing that when the pi-network tank is tuned to resonance, a virtual short circuit to rearward traveling waves is created at the input of the network. Consequently, instead of the reflected power reaching the tubes of the amplifier, it is totally re-reflected toward the load by the virtual short circuit appearing only to waves at the network input". Please note that when this was written, there were no solid-state transmitters with fixed 50 ohm outputs. Walt was talking specifically about tube transmitters with built-in adjustable pi-net antenna tuner circuits, like my old Globe Scout. The closest present-day transmitters to match the above statements would be something like my IC-756PRO with a built-in auto-tuner. I'm guessing it's a virtual short because the pi-network is resonant but what happens if it is a bit off. If it is a bit off, reflected voltage and current flow into the finals and superpose with the source voltage and current. Since the reflected voltage and current are 180 degrees out of phase, the superposition usually causes the load on the amp to become reactive. Even if the voltages are in phase or the currents are in phase, the load on the amp becomes something other than the designed-for load. The result can be over-voltage or over-current or both. That's not good. Also what happens in a transistor final with no pi? Note: most transistor finals have a fixed pi-network designed to operate into a fixed 50 ohm load. The results would be the same as the detuned example above. Such commercial finals are protected from over-voltage and over-current by decreasing the source power. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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