Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() WSQT wrote: This is what is meant by "Class F." A Class F amplifier has traps tuned to various harmonics to allow the use of a longer conduction angle and/or square wave drive with high efficiency and excellent modulation characteristics. Class F, class X, class Y. They are all recent "names" hung on what are really just class C amplifiers. I can do the exactly the same thing without a so called "trap" so long as the output device sees a high impedance at the third harmonic or better yet at all off harmonics. That isn't a trap anyway, it is a resonator. The function is to provide a high impedance at the third harmonic so the waveform slope is steep. It allows the output device to go through the transitional state where it is dissipating maximum power very fast. The goal is NOT to allow a longer conduction angle. The goal is to have the output device either on or off and spend less time in the high dissipation area where device resistance is neither very low or very high. The ideal duty cycle is 50%, with half time totally off and half time in saturation. This is why a very low mu trode with tons of negative bias worked so well for RCA. The grid and anode 3rd harmonic resonators allowed the grid and anode to see a very high impedance at the third harmonic, and this sped the transition time up. 73 Tom |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|