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On Sun, 17 Jul 2005 13:08:44 -0700, Frank Gilliland
wrote: 4) Here is the weird one. The SWR without the amp on is 1.1, but when I turn the amp on the SWR goes to 3.x:1 or higher, and I'm talking about the SWR displayed on a meter AFTER the amp. Not the SWR on the input side of the amp. Hmm. This one stumped me, but some other smart fellows suggested the amp has parasitic oscillations and the frequency (or frequencies) of the oscillation(s) are outside the bandwidth of the antenna. I can take another amp with two 3-500z tubes, and put it on the same antenna with no substantial increase in SWR from the antenna. The Palomar Elite 300 is only good for about 100 watts. The two 3-500s are good for 1300 watts. The antenna is rated at 5000 watts. I'm still working on the fix for this one. Tuned input and output circuits would probably fix it, but there is not alot of space inside the amp to work with. The reason for this problem is obvious -- the output impedance of the amp is not even close to 50 ohms. It's that simple. Actually the other guys were correct. I ran an experiment using a Barker and Williamson low pass filter with a 32 MHz cutoff. With the set-up below the SWR went high when the amp was turned on. RADIO===AMP===SWR METER====ANTENNA With the set-up below the SWR stayed at 1.1:1 with and without the amp on. RADIO===AMP===LOW PASS FILTER===SWR METER===ANTENNA Also the output of the amp showed about 110 watts without the low pass filter installed, but with the low pass filter installed and the watt meter connected after the low pass filter the output showed about 75 watts. That means about 30 watts was being transmitted above 30 MHz even through the fundamental was at 28 MHz. I doubled the value of the capacitors going form the transistor collector to ground, and the SWR dropped to 1.5:1 with the amp on and 1.1:1 with the amp off. Then I add 470 pf capacitors from the transistor base to ground and the SWR with the amp dropped to 1.3:1 with the amp on. Re-inserting the low pass filter in between the amp and the SWR meter showed 1.1:1 with and without the amp on, so some harminoc content was still be transmitted but to a lesser extent. A lack of working space inside the amp case made it difficult to install a pi-network on the input and output side of the transistor finals. RESOLUTION: The SWR increased was caused by harmonics above the fundamental frequency, and they were outside the bandwidth of the antenna. Lessons learned.... 1) Just because your amp shows 100 watts output does not mean that 100 watts is being transmitted on the frequency you are on. It may be less, and if the amp is poorly designed it could be alot less. 2) If your SWR goes up when you turn an amp on it could be because your amp has increased the harmonic output of your transmitted in a non-linear fashion. 3) If installing a low pass filter between your amp and the watt meter causes the wattage displayed on the watt meter to drop it is probably because you amp is wasting power on frequencies far above your main fundamental frequency. 4) If you go to the trouble of re-designing the Palomar Elite 300 amp and clean up all the dirty output your real output power on the frequency you are listening to will only be about 70 watts RMS tops, and even then you are over driving the amp. ...and lastly... The Palomar Elite 300 is a poorly designed piece of crap. Don't buy one. |