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rkrishnan wrote:
I am reading through the excellent book "Solid State Design" by Wes Hayward et al. I have a specific question on Class C amplifier. On chapter 2 Fig 15, a Clas C amplifier is shown with a buffer amplifier link coupled in front. Why is link coupling needed here, can't the collector be directly connected to the base? It is for impedance matching or is there any other motives behind this structure? It's for impedance matching. As usual, there are several ways it can be done, each with its own advantages and disadvantages. That method is probably the simplest for the particular application, but you have to watch the flux density in the transformer primary if it's wound on a ferrite core with no air gap (such as a toroid core) and make sure the D.C. current won't cause core saturation. Other methods allow you to separate the RF choke from the transformer, like in Fig. 16, so you can optimize the RF choke for its job and the transformer for its job. Or you can use several types of LC network to do the job. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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