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Old January 19th 09, 10:13 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
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Default UHF (70cm) PA

On Jan 19, 1:00*am, Bob wrote:
BV wrote:
P.S. It's a linear amp i want to build


73 de OZ1BV, Brian


A bit of advice:

..........a circuit without DC bias. *The Vbe max
is only 4 Volts, which gives a useful hint!

Hey OM,

I don't thin so. The hint should be the input impedence is like less
than 1 ohm. And although you may state that Vbe max is 4, that may
apply in class C but not say class AB where the all yoiu will be doing
is varying the current thru the base and the voltage will swing next
to nothing, like a base swing current of 10 or more amps into the base
impendence.

So you can't find a good schematic for a linear, I suggest you get a
good spice program, and a really big smith chart.

I wouldn't use teflon board of any kind, when teflon burns it turns to
mustard gas.

73 OM

n8zu
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Old January 19th 09, 11:43 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
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Default 48V automotive systems -- WAS: [UHF (70cm) PA]

On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 21:05:25 +0200, Paul Keinanen wrote:
On 19 Jan 2009 17:49:47 GMT, Allodoxaphobia wrote:
On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 01:17:52 -0800, geek wrote:
On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 06:00:45 +0000, Bob wrote:

snip

If I was designing a UHF PA, I'd choose FETs these days!

Alas, if automobiles used 48V instead of 12 ;-)


They will.


A few years ago 42 V (3x14 V) was supposed to be the new automobile
voltage, but I have not heard much of it lately :-).


I read about the engineering and design that was going into the "new
48V automotive systems" in the IEEE Spectrum in the last year or so.

A brief Google search of ieee.org did not locate the article for me.

Jonesy
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Old January 20th 09, 12:07 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
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Default 48V automotive systems -- WAS: [UHF (70cm) PA]

On Jan 19, 6:43*pm, Allodoxaphobia wrote:
On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 21:05:25 +0200, Paul Keinanen wrote:
On 19 Jan 2009 17:49:47 GMT, Allodoxaphobia wrote:
On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 01:17:52 -0800, geek wrote:
On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 06:00:45 +0000, Bob wrote:


snip


If I was designing a UHF PA, I'd choose FETs these days!


Alas, if automobiles used 48V instead of 12 ;-)


They will.


A few years ago 42 V (3x14 V) was supposed to be the new automobile
voltage, but I have not heard much of it lately :-).


I read about the engineering and design that was going into the "new
48V automotive systems" in the IEEE Spectrum in the last year or so.

A brief Google search of ieee.org did not locate the article for me.

Jonesy


http://search.yahoo.com/search;_ylt=...earch&fr=b1ie7
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Old January 20th 09, 09:06 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
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Default UHF (70cm) PA

geek wrote:

On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 06:00:45 +0000, Bob wrote:

snip

If I was designing a UHF PA, I'd choose FETs these days!


Alas, if automobiles used 48V instead of 12 ;-)

Cheers!


A lot of stereos have a DC-DC converter to generate a supply voltage like
that for the audio amplifier.

If you do build a DC-DC converter, then at least the output voltage could be
well regulated and free of spikes, unlike an automotive "12V" supply. Of
course quite a bit of shielding and LC filtering of the supply may be
needed to stop the PA supply from having ripple that will cause AM
sidebands on the Tx signal at an offset equal to the switcher frequency.

Chris

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Old January 25th 09, 02:00 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
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Default UHF (70cm) PA

geek wrote:
On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 06:00:45 +0000, Bob wrote:

snip

If I was designing a UHF PA, I'd choose FETs these days!


Alas, if automobiles used 48V instead of 12 ;-)

================
Switch Mode converter 12V ------ 48 V

Frank KN6WH / GM0CSZ
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