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![]() "Gary Schafer" wrote in message ... On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 15:54:12 -0700, Bill Turner wrote: On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 13:17:49 -0700, Roy Lewallen wrote: The average power of a 100% modulated 4 watt carrier is 6 watts, not 4. (If you want to look at it in the frequency domain, where the total power has to be the same as in the time domain, you've now got the original carrier plus two sidebands. The power in the two sidebands totals 2 watts.) _________________________________________________ ________ I have a question about AM sideband power. I have always believed what Roy says above, that the sidebands add to the total radiated power. You can see this when watching an S-meter. However. 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? I'll take a stab at this. It is probably because of how the power is being measured. An actual sample of output power is rarely used for monitoring. They may have just a simple rf voltmeter measuring the antenna line voltage, calibrated in watts. Many watt meters work in this fashion. When the carrier is modulated, the composite signal, carrier and side band voltage swings up to twice the voltage and down to zero volts with 100% positive and negative modulation. So the average voltage is the voltage that the carrier produces itself. The meter can't follow the swings fast enough so it stays at the average which is equal to the carrier. The plate current meter is in the same situation. It stands still also with modulation for the same reason even though the plate voltage may swing between 2 times and zero. If the modulation is not symmetrical, positive peaks greater than negative peaks, then you will see a slight upward kick with modulation as the average is no longer equal to the carrier voltage. An antenna current meter on the other hand will show a definite upward kick with modulation. The current meter is usually the thermal couple type of meter that actually requires power for it to operate. Heating of a resistor in it is what makes it work. Heating that thermal couple requires power. Since power output only increases with modulation, it never goes below carrier level, the antenna ammeter sees an average power increase with modulation. ============== Yet 'total' RF power can be neatly measured by means of a calibrated oscilloscope. Frank GM0CSZ / KN6WH |
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