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"arie" wrote
- Frequency = 1.8 Mhz - RF power = 1400 W - RF peak amplitude = 5400 Volts - External load res = 50 ohms - Phase shift = 90 degrees (to get a Q of around 12) - intrinsic Coil Q = 100 I get: C1 = 122.5 pF L = 63.80 C2 = 122.6 pF Is sounds very strange to me that both C1 and C2 have the same value whereas the Load resistance at anode is around 10414 ohms or at least much higher than 50 ohms and an external resistance of 50 Ohms What about the Load resistance at anode, I would think this should be somewhere aound 2800 ohms, considering the Power output and anode voltage swing. ==================================== Hi Arie, Circuit-Q is a dependent variable. It depends on nearly all program input parameters. It's value cannot be entered in the program because you don't know it. You know only what you would like it to be. It can be calculated accurately only AFTER parameters such as efficiency have been calculated. You may not be directly interested in phase shift but by entering it in the program it does allow you INDIRECTLY to control circuit-Q. To design an amplifier starting with values of Circuit-Q, DC Plate volts, Plate current operating angle, etc., there is no alternative to using the program to produce a multi-dimensional table of results. And even then they would be approximations. A phase shift of 90 degrees through a symetrical Pi-Network should set bells ringing. With all 3 reactance magnitudes being identical the network behaves as a 1/4-wave transmission line transformer. Terminating impedances can be anything you like provided Line Zo = Sqrt(Z1*Z2). You will notice you are not allowed to enter a phase shift as high as 180 degrees. That would correspond to 1/2-wave length of line which matches any impedance Z only to itself. It then makes itself redundent. The program would object to being asked to do something silly and would abort into the operating system. The program user would then blame the long-suffering author and not himself. ;o) ---- Reg, G4FGQ |
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