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On Mon, 15 Dec 2008 23:29:35 -0500, "NoSPAM"
wrote: "Telstar Electronics" wrote in message ... You mean to tell me that you take a clean sine wave... pass it through... say a single-ended class A amp... and you can put a tank on the output of that amplifier... and tune for a harmonic? You will get nothing. Of course you will. No active device is perfect. I decided to illustrate the fact that a single ended triode operated in Class A can produce harmonics. For a tube, I used a 6C4 (1/2 of a 12AU7) operated with 300 volts on the plate, a grid bias voltage of -7 volts, driven with a pure sine wave of 14 volts peak-to-peak. The high driving voltage was chosen to illustrate my earlier points, but the stage _IS_ operated Class A with the plate current between cutoff and saturation. Did you bypass the cathode resistor or not ? All active elements are more or less nonlinear, so if you need more or less linear amplification, you need to use feedback/feedforward. A non-bypassed cathode/emitter resistor will greatly improve the linearity of a single stage. Paul OH3LWR |
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