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![]() "Uwe" wrote in message ... They have an alternative way to tune by inserting a mA meter into the key lead but I do not get the little dips in current they are describing. For me it is more of a linear increase in current from the highest capacity setting (lowest current) to the setting where the cap is all open and the current is highest. It seems as though your Plate Tuning capacitor has too little capacitance to resonate at the frequency you are using. The way things are the max output occurs more or less at the lowest anode current of my power supply (about 35mA at 200V B+). Why do I tune for minimum current?? The combination of the Plate Tuning capacitor and the inductor in the output circuit comprise a parallel-resonant tuned circuit, which has its highest impedance at resonance. Therefore, when the two are resonant, current is at its lowest point. Tuning for maximum voltage on the antenna is not guaranteed to get the plate circuit on frequency, at least not the frequency you want. On many of those older tube transmitters, there was enough range in the plate tuning capacitor that the circuit could be tuned to the second harmonic of the desired frequency. Ie, if your desired frequency was 3500 kHz, the circuit could also be tuned to 7000 kHz. Measuring antenna voltage (which many cheap rigs did, by using a "Relative Output" meter, just an rf voltmeter connected across the antenna terminal) could lead you to adjust for the wrong resonance frequency. (In the 1960s the 80-meter Novice subband was 3.7-3.75 MHz, putting the second harmonic outside of any amateur band and generating a lot of QSL cards from the FCC for unsuspecting owners of transmitters like the Knight T-60, which had only a relative output meter.) If you can find someone who has a "dip meter," you can determine whether your plate circuit can be tuned to resonance, and, if not, how far off it is. A dip meter is an oscillator with an exposed coil, and an analog meter that dips when the oscillator is positioned near a resonant circuit. You adjust the dip meter knob until its meter dips and read the frequency off the dial. The dial calibration is not great, but if you have a general-coverage receiver you can listen for the oscillator signal. I would also investigate the coupling capacitor from the tube plate to the ungrounded terminal of the plate tuning capacitor. It may have dried out and shorted. Carefully measure for dc voltage from the ungrounded terminal of the plate tuning capacitor to the chassis. There shouldn't be any. If there is, replace the capacitor. As a rule of thumb, its voltage rating should be 4x the plate voltage, capacitance about 1000-1500 pF. "PM" |
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