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"John Sandin" wrote in message
... I guess it would have been easier and even cheaper to buy a kit. But I had fun building this, and I guess I'll have almost as much fun rebuilding it. One of the wonderful things about amateur radio is that there are so many facets to explore. Each of us finds his own favorites, but in my mind, there are few things in life as fun as building and operating your own equipment. Your low pass filter leaps out at me. Typically, the coil windings are spread out over 80% of the toroid, rather than 20%. If, in fact, this was the intent of the low pass filter design, then your inductances could be quite a way off. Not only would this change the cutoff frequency of your LPF (raising it most probably, so not likely the direct cause of low output), but it would also change the impedance the transmitter sees. (I'm leaping to the conclusion here that the LPF is between the transmitter and the antenna). What this means is that the transmitter isn't seeing 50 ohms even if your antenna is resonant. This would result in the final heating, and could also favor the parasitics that I suspect we have going on here. As you explore what's going on here, keep in mind that these things aren't magic, what they do is always goverened by the laws of physics. Validate by measurement that what you think is happening is, in fact, what is going on. You really don't need a ton of test equipment. Granted, lacking lots of gear, each measurement can be a bit of a project in itself, but once you have a DMM and have built an RF probe (about a buck's worth of parts), you can make pretty much any measurement if you think it through. ... |
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