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On Mon, 24 May 2004 05:46:01 GMT, "Lord Snooty" wrote:
At 8.000 Mhz and a load consisting of 50 ohms carbon 10W 10% in series with a capacitance trimmer bank, at an output power level of about 2W, a load capacitor value of 250 +/- 10pF (-j80 ohms @ 8 MHz) was found to produce a minimum in the total voltage across the load. Also, as capacitance was increased over the range 100-700pF, the voltage across the load resistor increased monotonically. The latter is easy to explain (it means the source reactance is positive, and smaller than +j28.4 ohms), but the former is beyond my ken. Best, Andrew Hi Andrew, You got me confused too. Is the "load" the resistor, or the resistor-cap combination when you measure these voltages? You describe a voltage minimum across the load for a cap setting of 250pF; but you also maintain that the voltage across the load increases for the variation in capacitance from 100 to 700pF which contradicts the first measurement. Further, the construction of a high power semiconductor does not lend itself to supporting inductive reactances (the junctions are quite manifestly capacitive in structure). By specification the device is characterized as exhibiting 27pF @ 1 MHz (for 28Vdc although there is not much variation until below 10Vdc). There are a world of other variables to consider, but none portray inductance within the device. This alone should provoke you to re-examine your premise. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |