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#1
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I am in need of a 60 watt mod xfmr. I want to use P-P 807's to modulate a
command transmitter about 120 watts input to the 1625s. Just missed a new Triad unit on eBay due to dumb bidding. Stancore , Thordarson etc all fine. Please state condition and price. I have and ART-13 Mod xfmr but have no idea the pri and sec impedances. Maybe it would work. Any ideas? Ken NAØY |
#2
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On Mon, 12 Apr 2004 10:57:25 -0500, "Ken Fattmann"
wrote: I am in need of a 60 watt mod xfmr. I want to use P-P 807's to modulate a command transmitter about 120 watts input to the 1625s. Just missed a new Triad unit on eBay due to dumb bidding. Stancore , Thordarson etc all fine. Please state condition and price. I have and ART-13 Mod xfmr but have no idea the pri and sec impedances. Maybe it would work. Any ideas? Ken NAØY It will work fine. 73 Gary K4FMX |
#3
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"Ken Fattmann" wrote in message ...
I am in need of a 60 watt mod xfmr. I want to use P-P 807's to modulate a command transmitter about 120 watts input to the 1625s. Just missed a new Triad unit on eBay due to dumb bidding. Stancore , Thordarson etc all fine. Please state condition and price. I have and ART-13 Mod xfmr but have no idea the pri and sec impedances. Maybe it would work. Any ideas? Ken NAØY The original ARC 5 mod transformer is perfect for this. seems that they are hard to find..another idea is look for an old AM marine ship to shore radiotelephone..there are lots of them somewhere,they are obsolete. most common transmitter used pair 807s final and pair 807s modulators..if you find one it will cost a whopping $20 or less.lots of other good parts also..original marine freq. 2 to 3 mhz.AM at 150 watts input.. good luck 73 Harold W4PQW |
#4
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Gary Schafer wrote in message . ..
It will work fine. Hmmm...PP 807's @ same load Z as PP 811A triodes...interesting... |
#6
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Gary Schafer wrote:
Hmmm...PP 807's @ same load Z as PP 811A triodes...interesting... It doesn't matter what the actual impedance of the modulator or the final is. It is the ratio that matters. The ART 13 transformer has a primary rated at 15000 ohms and the secondary at 7300 ohms. That is a ratio of about 2:1. The Johnson viking 2 (pair of 1625s modulating a pair of 6146s) used a transformer with a ratio of around 2.4:1 or so if I remember right. That was a little high as the modulators would go into clipping before 100% modulation could be achieved on that rig. A little lower ratio mod transformer would have allowed a little more modulation. So the ART 13 transformer is just about ideal for that kind of setup. 73 Gary K4FMX One small thing, don't go too ape s*** crazy with substitutions. You must understand that for a given wattage transformer core, higher impedance windings will have more turns than lower impedance windings. It wouldn't be ok to sub a 2:1 transformer that was meant for 10K for a 2:1 that was meant for 1K. Not at the design power for the transformer. Why does this matter? Subbing a much higher impedance transformer for a low impedance transformer will result in greater losses due to the higher resistance of the windings. Subbing a low impedance transformer for a much higher impedance transformer will likely result in core saturation and loss problems due to the higher fluxes the core sees. There aren't enough turns on the core. Try find a sub that is close to the design impedance of your desired transformer. -Chuck Harris |
#7
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On Thu, 15 Apr 2004 14:21:46 -0400, Chuck Harris
wrote: Gary Schafer wrote: Hmmm...PP 807's @ same load Z as PP 811A triodes...interesting... It doesn't matter what the actual impedance of the modulator or the final is. It is the ratio that matters. The ART 13 transformer has a primary rated at 15000 ohms and the secondary at 7300 ohms. That is a ratio of about 2:1. The Johnson viking 2 (pair of 1625s modulating a pair of 6146s) used a transformer with a ratio of around 2.4:1 or so if I remember right. That was a little high as the modulators would go into clipping before 100% modulation could be achieved on that rig. A little lower ratio mod transformer would have allowed a little more modulation. So the ART 13 transformer is just about ideal for that kind of setup. 73 Gary K4FMX One small thing, don't go too ape s*** crazy with substitutions. You must understand that for a given wattage transformer core, higher impedance windings will have more turns than lower impedance windings. It wouldn't be ok to sub a 2:1 transformer that was meant for 10K for a 2:1 that was meant for 1K. Not at the design power for the transformer. Why does this matter? Subbing a much higher impedance transformer for a low impedance transformer will result in greater losses due to the higher resistance of the windings. Subbing a low impedance transformer for a much higher impedance transformer will likely result in core saturation and loss problems due to the higher fluxes the core sees. There aren't enough turns on the core. Try find a sub that is close to the design impedance of your desired transformer. -Chuck Harris ------------------------------------------------ While it is true that there is a limit as to how far you can "stretch" the impedance of a mod transformer before getting into trouble, you can go an amazingly long ways. As an interesting example: The Stancor Poly-Pedance transformer that has multiple taps to obtain various impedance ratios (15 to 120 watt series) uses the same taps for 2000 ohms primary to 1150 ohms secondary (1.74:1 ratio), as it does for 20000 ohms primary to 11500 ohms secondary. Also the same 1.74:1 ratio! That's a 10:1 range! The link below has the ART 13 and other transformer info. http://www.amwindow.org/tech/htm/modtran/modtran.htm Select Miscellaneous to find the ART 13 transformer specs and connections. Other transformers (stancor etc.) are listed also. 73 Gary K4FMX |
#8
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Gary Schafer wrote:
Try find a sub that is close to the design impedance of your desired transformer. -Chuck Harris ------------------------------------------------ While it is true that there is a limit as to how far you can "stretch" the impedance of a mod transformer before getting into trouble, you can go an amazingly long ways. As an interesting example: The Stancor Poly-Pedance transformer that has multiple taps to obtain various impedance ratios (15 to 120 watt series) uses the same taps for 2000 ohms primary to 1150 ohms secondary (1.74:1 ratio), as it does for 20000 ohms primary to 11500 ohms secondary. Also the same 1.74:1 ratio! That's a 10:1 range! The link below has the ART 13 and other transformer info. http://www.amwindow.org/tech/htm/modtran/modtran.htm Select Miscellaneous to find the ART 13 transformer specs and connections. Other transformers (stancor etc.) are listed also. 73 Gary K4FMX Hi Gary, Yep, you can get away with alot if you start with a transformer that is overdesigned. The Stancor Poly-Pedance transformer must have an excessive amount of iron for the 20K range, and an adequate amount for the 2K range. Not always the case. One would tend to think that the ART-13's tranny would be built to be on the light side, being as it was made to fly in an airplane. But I don't remember them being all that light. -Chuck Harris |
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