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I have some ideas, but that's all. I hope someone with more recent
direct experience with AM broadcasting than mine who really knows the answer will comment. I will go out on a limb and speculate that the carrier isn't being reduced during modulation. If it were, simple envelope detectors would produce serious distortion. And if the carrier isn't being reduced, then the power has to be greater when modulation is present. But let's see if an expert will comment -- if I'm wrong I'll gladly eat my words. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Bill Turner wrote: Last year I took a tour of the KFI transmitter site in Southern California and was fascinated by the 50kW transmitter. On the transmitter's front panel was a meter calibrated in output power. It read *steady* at 50kW, except when the operator dropped the power momentarily to 5kW, just to show he could. Ever since then, I've kicked myself for not asking why the power didn't rise with modulation. The transmitter was a Harris model DX50 (IIRC) which uses dozens of low power solid state modules which are switched on and off digitally to produce the RF output. Could it be that as they are switched on and off, they also are driven in such a way as to maintain constant power? In other words, when modulation is added the carrier power is reduced? It's the only thing that comes to mind, but there may be another reason. Ideas? -- Bill W6WRT |
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