Question on wattmeter
On Tue, 8 May 2007 18:35:30 +0200, "Antonio Vernucci"
wrote:
I am not sure whether, confining operation to the square law region, it would be
possible to build a power meter that has no DC amplifier (like the Struthers
wattmeter).
Hi Tony,
Most of the expense of the unit is in slugs and the base unit.
Certainly the diodes may be precious (I've rebuilt and calibrated
them), but in today's world you can replace them with garden variety
diodes and make up the difference with analog amplifiers with shaping
to conform to the meter scale. There is more than enough room in the
base unit to do this and the investment would pay off when you would
be tempted to just let it gather dust.
There's no such thing as magic diodes, merely mil-spec hand selected
ones that push cost through the roof.
Look at the meter movement for its full scale deflection current. From
there it is a rather simple matter to use one of several diode i/v
curves to reverse-engineer the solution. Buy pallet full of the
appropriate technology (Si/Ge/Tunnel/Avalanche/what-have-you) and
select. OR take one of those garden variety diodes and build a log
amp (or simply buy a log amp). Add a battery clip with battery and
move on.
73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC
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