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On Mon, 6 Sep 2004 06:20:23 -0500, "Richard Fry"
wrote: I won't try to soften this Hi OM, I kin take it ;-) : your conclusion above doesn't just _appear_ to be wrong, it IS wrong. 100% wrong. Hmmm, in light of what is about to be said by you this continues to be amusing. How do I know? I was the author of all of the brochures and technical data sheets for Harris' entire FM product line for the ten years before I retired. Yes, your patter sounds like a publicist rather than a design engineer - I've snipped your commercial fluff as it is pretty soft still. It is designed for a 50 ohm load. Imagine THAT! Of course I won't hold my breath for your explanations WHY (or -gasp- how) it is designed for 50/75/100/300 Ohms and not just slap the output into any load - that would be an engineering issue of matching which seems to be foreign to your discussion. Glad to see my inclusions of so much of your copy brought back you memory that rejected this: On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 11:25:02 -0500, "Richard Fry" wrote: The source impedance of most transmitters is not published even today. I can accept that perhaps under your hand it was not, but Harris has returned to the fold of conventional design specifications: MW-10B SPECIFICATIONS RF OUTPUT IMPEDANCE: 50 ohms, unbalanced. Other output impedances available on special order. Harris Platinum Z FM transmitter 100 ohm output impedance (unbalanced) HARRIS SW-50 A RF Output Impedance 300 ohms balanced, 2.0 to 1 maximum VSWR Don't bother rummaging up you own drafts lingering in the musty corners of the web, there are newer spec sheets available that easily eclipse you in numbers to the contrary, but typical engineering regards for specifying the output impedance. I would suggest you review the works of a real engineer, Geoff Mendenhall (you know, the guy you dissed) who explicitly offers formula and specifications that correlate to current Harris equipment design considerations for matching source Z to load Z. This has been fairly common material available from Terman (One of Geoff's references) for 70 years now and even the digital age has not changed this: It sounds pretty simple, in fact, each module has a torroid (coil) which is the load for that module; all those torroids are lined up and an iron pipe is run through these torroids so that the combined output of all the modules is coupled into this pipe. One end of the pipe is at ground, the other end is the RF output of the transmitter. There is an output network to match impedance of the pipe, which is probably only a few Ohms, to the required output impedance which is usually 50 Ohms, although sometimes high power transmitters are set up to provide 75 Ohms, once in a while even 300 Ohms, to drive an open wire type transmission line system. From the Goatman: "It was necessary to determine the plate load impedance (formula) = 1000 Ohms where Emin min drop across the tube in saturation I1 ac plate current. "Since this Zp was to be coupled into a Z output of 50 Ohm, a impedance transformation of 20:1 was needed." Perhaps this is too many words for the publicity department style sheet, but to engineers there isn't an iota of difference in the design considerations of the final over the course of 1968-2004. It goes much further back than this - we will skip that so as to not appear to be roughing the receiver. However, to this subject I am quite used to the rebuttal "You are not going to change my mind." Impeccable logic such as this and variations offered by you have scant foothold in the sweep of time. I especially enjoy the sharp swerves to avoid the Goatman's simple expression above. Reminds me of the Chinese contortionist acts that used to be the staple of the Ed Sullivan show. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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