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I can't seem to get it to work right. It's made by Electronics Unlimited in
Lebanon, Tennesse. The capacitors on the primary side of the output transformer were changed at some point and I can't find the right value. If anyone has one of these or a schematic, it would be extremely helpful. It has a high/low switch. If I put it on low or put in less power, the power meter reading shoots up to 150 or so with a reflected reading of 40 watts, but drops back to 50 watts with modulation. On high with 4 watts in, it seems fairly normal, but not completely. It bounces around 75 watts. Is anyone familiar with this amp? Is it class C? It has an AM/SSB switch. The transistors are 2 MRF455A's. The bases are grounded through the input transformer, which has a center tap to a choke to ground. I see no forward bias. Is this what causes the erratic behavior? Any help with this thing other than toss it in the river would be appreciated. Chris |
#2
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In .net, "Chris"
wrote: I can't seem to get it to work right. It's made by Electronics Unlimited in Lebanon, Tennesse. The capacitors on the primary side of the output transformer were changed at some point and I can't find the right value. If anyone has one of these or a schematic, it would be extremely helpful. No schematic. The output impedance of the MRF455 is about 1.5 to 2 ohms, so those caps are going to be fairly large -- somewhere around 500 to 1000 pF depending on the band you want to splatter. I would suggest 680 pF to start, and only change them if the output trimmers won't tune into a dummy load. And they really should be silver-mica caps. It has a high/low switch. If I put it on low or put in less power, the power meter reading shoots up to 150 or so with a reflected reading of 40 watts, but drops back to 50 watts with modulation. On high with 4 watts in, it seems fairly normal, but not completely. It bounces around 75 watts. Is anyone familiar with this amp? Is it class C? It has an AM/SSB switch. The transistors are 2 MRF455A's. The bases are grounded through the input transformer, which has a center tap to a choke to ground. I see no forward bias. Is this what causes the erratic behavior? Any help with this thing other than toss it in the river would be appreciated. Chris The transistors are indeed biased class C which makes your amp just another cheap CB splatterbox, but that's not responsible for the unusual behavior. It's very possible that you have a bad component somewhere, or that you don't have a power supply that can handle the load. But it may also be your operation of the amp. Each MRF455 can be squeezed for about 80 watts, but remember that rating is peak power, -not- RMS. In other words, a pair of MRF455's will get you 160 watts PEP which is great for SSB, but in AM you -must- reduce your input power so your deadkey does not go above 40 watts RMS (or 1/4 of the rated peak power). Feed it more than that and you start clipping, causing even -more- harmonic distortion & splatter than a 'clean' class C amp. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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