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Reg;
As I said it was my guess. That's what you get for guessing. It would seem that your house has sufficient capacity to carry a 60 watt light bulb and a 100 watt transmitter. If you ever find out what happened let the group know. Maybe I'll meet you on the air some day. Dave WD9BDZ Reg Edwards wrote: As to you lamp dimming, I do not know what the wiring capacity of your house was but the transmitter was being fed by the same mains drop from the street as the lamp. That is, IMO, the most likely cause of the dimming. Just my guess. Dave WD9BDZ ======================================= Dave, The mains supply from the road was capable of 50 kilowatts without excessive volts drop. For a few years it was used for electric cookers, several 3-bar central heating radiators, etc., without problems. Far more than the TS-520 with an RF power output of 100 watts. There may been something very peculiar with the 60-watt bedroom filament lamp which caused it to cool off when both RF plus 50Hz power currents flowed through it. I didn't try another bulb. There may have been incorrect house wiring such that the only power point in the bedroom, used for the transmitter, was connected, by mistake, to the lighting circuit. But even then, the lighting circuit should have been capable of withstanding the load of the transmitter without much of a voltage drop. Shortly afterwards I moved the shack downstairs into the garage. At the time I never checked house wiring and later on the family sold the house and moved. The new owner was not a radio amateur. ---- Reg, G4FGQ. |
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