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"Brian" wrote in message ...
I recently got a good deal (five bucks) on a "ten meter" amp with two 6LQ6 tubes (no, I don't intend to go below 28.3 mHz with it). It seems to work, more or less, but I was wondering something. At about 28.5 mHz, it puts out 43 watts with 4 watts driving it on AM (using a CB converted to 10 meters). Is this normal, or are the tubes getting soft? I understand a pair of 6LQ6 tubes are rated for a lot higher output, but I don't know how much I can feed into it without overdriving it. If I feed in 7 watts AM or 25 watts SSB with an HTX-10, will I earn the splatter award of the year? Thanks. Brian Well, using it as an AM linear isn't too good in the first place, as the overall efficiency is less than 30%. AS in the other posts, check plate input power (plate voltage x plate current). I'm sure it is running grounded cathode, and you should be at about 200 mils plate current or better if the tubes are good. Plate voltage should be anywhere from 600 to 800 volts. Use the CW mode and tickle it with a watt or two of drive and figure out the power gain (Power out divided by power in). Advance the drive until the amp saturates i.e. no further output for increasing input. If the plate current is less than 200 mils then you've got flat tubes and they'll set you back almost a C note for a pair. That's probably why you got the amp cheap. Also beware that these amplifiers weren't built to exacting specifications for linearity, or spurious products. I'd always use a LP filter on the output, and an antenna tuner to provide another tuned circuit to clean things up a bit. What you might do, is find a 'higher' voltage 6LQ6, one with a different first digit (filament voltage). These quite often go very cheap. Then provide a filament transformer to light them. For example, 25LQ6 ---- 25.2vac transformer. If it is a mobile (12vDC input) amp, use a pair of 12LQ6's and tie the filaments in parallel. If you can't find tubes, I'd gut things out and put in a pair of 6146's. They're readily availabe, rugged, and can quite often be had for $5-10 a pair. You'll have to change the tube sockets of course to octal, but the operating voltages and the Pi network should be close to the same. And you won't detract from the value of the amp -- you'll gain. Gary Hildebrand WA7KKP |
#2
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I'd gut things out and put in a pair of 6146's.
6146's can run grounded grid ? "Gary hildebrand" wrote in message om... "Brian" wrote in message ... I recently got a good deal (five bucks) on a "ten meter" amp with two 6LQ6 tubes (no, I don't intend to go below 28.3 mHz with it). It seems to work, more or less, but I was wondering something. At about 28.5 mHz, it puts out 43 watts with 4 watts driving it on AM (using a CB converted to 10 meters). Is this normal, or are the tubes getting soft? I understand a pair of 6LQ6 tubes are rated for a lot higher output, but I don't know how much I can feed into it without overdriving it. If I feed in 7 watts AM or 25 watts SSB with an HTX-10, will I earn the splatter award of the year? Thanks. Brian Well, using it as an AM linear isn't too good in the first place, as the overall efficiency is less than 30%. AS in the other posts, check plate input power (plate voltage x plate current). I'm sure it is running grounded cathode, and you should be at about 200 mils plate current or better if the tubes are good. Plate voltage should be anywhere from 600 to 800 volts. Use the CW mode and tickle it with a watt or two of drive and figure out the power gain (Power out divided by power in). Advance the drive until the amp saturates i.e. no further output for increasing input. If the plate current is less than 200 mils then you've got flat tubes and they'll set you back almost a C note for a pair. That's probably why you got the amp cheap. Also beware that these amplifiers weren't built to exacting specifications for linearity, or spurious products. I'd always use a LP filter on the output, and an antenna tuner to provide another tuned circuit to clean things up a bit. What you might do, is find a 'higher' voltage 6LQ6, one with a different first digit (filament voltage). These quite often go very cheap. Then provide a filament transformer to light them. For example, 25LQ6 ---- 25.2vac transformer. If it is a mobile (12vDC input) amp, use a pair of 12LQ6's and tie the filaments in parallel. If you can't find tubes, I'd gut things out and put in a pair of 6146's. They're readily availabe, rugged, and can quite often be had for $5-10 a pair. You'll have to change the tube sockets of course to octal, but the operating voltages and the Pi network should be close to the same. And you won't detract from the value of the amp -- you'll gain. Gary Hildebrand WA7KKP |
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