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On Jul 20, 8:20 pm, Phil Kane wrote:
On Wed, 16 Jul 2008 20:51:14 EDT, wrote: There are, such as RF power amplifiers for HF and low VHF. While it is certainly possible to build the solidstate equivalent of, say, a single-3-500Z HF amplifier, the SS version costs more and is less efficient. Yet the broadcast industry is going to SS as fast as they can. Modular in design, if one "final" module fails, the power gets reduced but they stay on the air. If a "final" tube fails, it's February 2009 much sooner. Reduction in maintenance costs outweigh capital investment. I don't think that you can buy a new AM broadcast transmitter below 50 KW that isn't SS all the way, and there are plenty of SS 50 rigs in service. Of course! But that shows the difference between Amateur Radio and other services. Perhaps I should have specified that the comparisons I was making were between SS and tube amps meant for Amateur Radio service, particularly HF and VHF service. A broadcast transmitter has to be ultra-reliable and built for continuous service. At 8760 hours in a standard year, it doesn't take long for a component with an expected life of 10,000 or 20,000 hours life to require replacement. Which BC folks tend to do on a schedule, rather than waiting for failure to force the issue. But with a very few exceptions, an amateur transmitter spends very little time actually transmitting. I'd guess that most active amateurs are on the air less than 1000 hours per year (that's about 2-3/4 hours per day, every single day), and when they are on the air, most spend at least half their time listening. OTOH, most amateurs will change frequency at least once in a while... So while the BC station owner can justify the purchase of an SS transmitter based on lower maintenance costs, the amateur is usually more limited by first-cost. 73 de Jim, N2EY |