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![]() "Straydog" wrote in message My understanding of AM transmitter technology would estimate that a 32v3, with ~120 DC input (two 6146s, or were they still using one 4D32?) would have at most (class C, plate modulated) 70% X 120 = 80 watts of CW carrier output. 60 watts of audio on that final tube (as a non-linear high level mixer) will at best, double the _instantaneous_ (peak) input voltage, therefore power to 240 watts (plate current will _not_ double even if the plate voltage doubles on peak audio cycle [look at your tube curves again of iP vs vP at constant biases]) which you could only attempt to measure with an oscilloscope. Peak output? Could it be more than 240 x 0.7 = 168 watts? I doubt it (unless he's got something like "super-modulation" in the rig). Without delving into the limitations of the 32V3, according to the info from an ARRL publication: "..since the amplitude at the peak of the upswing is twice the unmodulated amplitude, the power at this instant is four times the unmodulated, or 400 watts." Average power, on the other hand, will be 1.5 times carrier. A Class C amplifier with high level modulation should produce an instaneous PEP of 4x carrier power. Pete |
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