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design of frequency multiplicator stages
Do you known about good articles (or books) about the design of
frequency multiplicator stages using tubes ? I want to learn about choosing the operation point and the optimal load, in order to get a good efficiency and a good output power while reminding in the allowed limits. Thanks a lot ! Claude |
design of frequency multiplicator stages
On Aug 19, 4:11*am, Claude Frantz wrote:
Do you known about good articles (or books) about the design of frequency multiplicator stages using tubes ? I want to learn about choosing the operation point and the optimal load, in order to get a good efficiency and a good output power while reminding in the allowed limits. Thanks a lot ! Clarke and Hess, "Communications Circuits Analysis and Design", is a good book about operating points and goes into the math of figuring out what harmonics are produced at an operating point and drive. They also have a very good analysis of mixers. The math isn't heavyweight but is definitely college-level requiring application of calculus and it doesn't hurt to understand Laplace transforms either. Today you'd probably do a SPICE simulation instead of the Taylor series expansions that Clarke and Hess go through, but it's still very worthwhile to understand what operating point parameters do in terms of harmonics and the book gives insight that simply running simulations won't give you. In the ham cookbook sense, it is more common to copy a circuit out of a handbook, build it and crank up the input power until you either get the efficiency you expect, or you add another stage to get the power you need. Both the ARRL handbook and Experimental Methods in RF Design go into the sorts of efficiencies expected from different designs. Most tube multipliers are simply operated in deep class C, with more saturation than might be done for an efficient RF amp. Tim N3QE |
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