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#1
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I have a Drake L-4B, which I purchased new in about 1975. Recently I have
started to use RTTY mode with the L-4B, and I have some concerns about what is the safe RTTY power level for this amplifier. The Drake easily puts out 1 kW into my antenna, but during an RTTY contest the transmission duty cycle can approach 50%. During a long-winded rag chew, a transmission might be as long as five minutes (just like the old AM days!). I am reasonably certain that the L-4B (both the amplifier deck and the PS) can withstand long transmissions at (say) 500 watts out, but my concern is with the 1000 watt level. John, N9JG |
#2
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John,
The tubes are rated at a total of 1000 watts dissipation, so I'd say if your input is 2kw and output is 1 kw you are ok. The power supply might get a bit warm but I seriously doubt that it would fail under these conditions. I hear that the electrolytics fail often in L4Bs at about that age, so the heat in the PS might not be good for aging caps, so now might be a good time to change them. If you are ragchewing you could back the power down or maybe use the low voltage setting, but for contesting you probably want all the power and dbs you can get. By the way, I have one here also and I need to get in there and change my caps too. I recently added a transistor swiching circuit for the antenna relay to make my transceiver happier. Rick K2XT |
#3
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Why push it ?
The difference between 500 and a 1000 watts is only 3db Its not worth stressing out the power supply and tubes. "John, N9JG" wrote in message t... I have a Drake L-4B, which I purchased new in about 1975. Recently I have started to use RTTY mode with the L-4B, and I have some concerns about what is the safe RTTY power level for this amplifier. The Drake easily puts out 1 kW into my antenna, but during an RTTY contest the transmission duty cycle can approach 50%. During a long-winded rag chew, a transmission might be as long as five minutes (just like the old AM days!). I am reasonably certain that the L-4B (both the amplifier deck and the PS) can withstand long transmissions at (say) 500 watts out, but my concern is with the 1000 watt level. John, N9JG |
#4
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Thanks for the reply. Your suggestion about the HV caps has already been
followed. The L-4B was in storage from 1990-2005, so before I put it back in service, I replaced the original Eimac finals with Chinese graphite anode 3-500ZGs and replaced the HV diode and cap strings. Like you, I didn't want to have an aging cap blow. I followed the recommendation in my Orion manual and use an Amitron ARB-704 switching box to interface between the amp key output of my Orion transceiver and the VOX relay input of the L-4B. John, N9JG "Rick" wrote in message ... John, The tubes are rated at a total of 1000 watts dissipation, so I'd say if your input is 2kw and output is 1 kw you are ok. The power supply might get a bit warm but I seriously doubt that it would fail under these conditions. I hear that the electrolytics fail often in L4Bs at about that age, so the heat in the PS might not be good for aging caps, so now might be a good time to change them. If you are ragchewing you could back the power down or maybe use the low voltage setting, but for contesting you probably want all the power and dbs you can get. By the way, I have one here also and I need to get in there and change my caps too. I recently added a transistor swiching circuit for the antenna relay to make my transceiver happier. Rick K2XT |
#5
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FWIW, Although the Drake manual for the L4B says that tuning/operation
for CW and RTTY are the same, in one of my L4B books, there's what looks to be a 2nd or 3rd generation copy of a Drake letter that speaks to RTTY activity. The Drake letter recommends that the power level for RTTY be limited to 400 watts, citing the near 100% duty cycle, when key-down. I guess you take your pick? I run mine at about 400 watts, just to be on the conservative side....... John, N9JG wrote: I have a Drake L-4B, which I purchased new in about 1975. Recently I have started to use RTTY mode with the L-4B, and I have some concerns about what is the safe RTTY power level for this amplifier. The Drake easily puts out 1 kW into my antenna, but during an RTTY contest the transmission duty cycle can approach 50%. During a long-winded rag chew, a transmission might be as long as five minutes (just like the old AM days!). I am reasonably certain that the L-4B (both the amplifier deck and the PS) can withstand long transmissions at (say) 500 watts out, but my concern is with the 1000 watt level. John, N9JG |
#6
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Probably a good idea since I don't think I'd like the smell of a burned out
plate transformer and rf choke. "K3HVG" wrote in message ... FWIW, Although the Drake manual for the L4B says that tuning/operation for CW and RTTY are the same, in one of my L4B books, there's what looks to be a 2nd or 3rd generation copy of a Drake letter that speaks to RTTY activity. The Drake letter recommends that the power level for RTTY be limited to 400 watts, citing the near 100% duty cycle, when key-down. I guess you take your pick? I run mine at about 400 watts, just to be on the conservative side....... John, N9JG wrote: I have a Drake L-4B, which I purchased new in about 1975. Recently I have started to use RTTY mode with the L-4B, and I have some concerns about what is the safe RTTY power level for this amplifier. The Drake easily puts out 1 kW into my antenna, but during an RTTY contest the transmission duty cycle can approach 50%. During a long-winded rag chew, a transmission might be as long as five minutes (just like the old AM days!). I am reasonably certain that the L-4B (both the amplifier deck and the PS) can withstand long transmissions at (say) 500 watts out, but my concern is with the 1000 watt level. John, N9JG |
#7
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Before I read Jeep's response, I was getting ready to respond that 400 watts
of output is right. Solder melts and things fail. I think that is a realistic number. It is not the tube plate dissipation that is the limiting factor. It is heat - both from the components and from the currents flowing through the switch contacts and the coils. Colin K7FM |
#8
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Does the L4B use the Eimac tube chimney and matching tube socket?
The tube pins can get so hot the soldered connections on tubes without the chimney/socket [i.e. Heathkit Cooling] can and do melt at 100% duty cycle at full power. K3HVG wrote: FWIW, Although the Drake manual for the L4B says that tuning/operation for CW and RTTY are the same, in one of my L4B books, there's what looks to be a 2nd or 3rd generation copy of a Drake letter that speaks to RTTY activity. The Drake letter recommends that the power level for RTTY be limited to 400 watts, citing the near 100% duty cycle, when key-down. I guess you take your pick? I run mine at about 400 watts, just to be on the conservative side....... John, N9JG wrote: I have a Drake L-4B, which I purchased new in about 1975. Recently I have started to use RTTY mode with the L-4B, and I have some concerns about what is the safe RTTY power level for this amplifier. The Drake easily puts out 1 kW into my antenna, but during an RTTY contest the transmission duty cycle can approach 50%. During a long-winded rag chew, a transmission might be as long as five minutes (just like the old AM days!). I am reasonably certain that the L-4B (both the amplifier deck and the PS) can withstand long transmissions at (say) 500 watts out, but my concern is with the 1000 watt level. John, N9JG |
#9
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Yes it does. Drake did an excellent job when they designed and manufactured
the L-4B. "Dave" wrote in message . .. Does the L4B use the Eimac tube chimney and matching tube socket? The tube pins can get so hot the soldered connections on tubes without the chimney/socket [i.e. Heathkit Cooling] can and do melt at 100% duty cycle at full power. K3HVG wrote: FWIW, Although the Drake manual for the L4B says that tuning/operation for CW and RTTY are the same, in one of my L4B books, there's what looks to be a 2nd or 3rd generation copy of a Drake letter that speaks to RTTY activity. The Drake letter recommends that the power level for RTTY be limited to 400 watts, citing the near 100% duty cycle, when key-down. I guess you take your pick? I run mine at about 400 watts, just to be on the conservative side....... John, N9JG wrote: I have a Drake L-4B, which I purchased new in about 1975. Recently I have started to use RTTY mode with the L-4B, and I have some concerns about what is the safe RTTY power level for this amplifier. The Drake easily puts out 1 kW into my antenna, but during an RTTY contest the transmission duty cycle can approach 50%. During a long-winded rag chew, a transmission might be as long as five minutes (just like the old AM days!). I am reasonably certain that the L-4B (both the amplifier deck and the PS) can withstand long transmissions at (say) 500 watts out, but my concern is with the 1000 watt level. John, N9JG |
#10
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![]() Yes it does. Drake did an excellent job when they designed and manufactured the L-4B. Well, I'll say this- it sure is a pretty amp, with that lovely blue glow from those meters and that warm glow from those beautiful filaments. Mine was cranking my signal out in fine style the first 24 hours of the dx contest, getting me easily across the pond to all over Europe from NJ on 80 meters and making me quite proud. I wasn't even transmitting when all of a sudden..... ka-pow ! a flash of light from the power supply, and I dove for the power switch, and unplugged the line. Then the smell of burning something or other. So far here's what I've determined, then we can debate how excellent it was designed. There are 2 bleeder resistors up on top of the PS on either side of the transformer. They are 50k at I guess about 50 watts, and if so, are within spec even at 3000 volts. One of them opened up for some reason, and I can't think of a eason for a bleeder to fail other than it just got to be too old. Now, 120 volts is derived from the bottom of the bleeders through another power resistor of about 5 k, I forget exactly. This positive 120 volts is used for the antenna relay and in standby is applied to the CT of the filament transformer to cut off the tubes in standby mode. So when the bleeder opened, the HV probably went up a little, and the tubes drew some extra current, I don't know how much, or how long but eventually it blew a little 0.82 ohm fuse resistor in the HV lead. Still TBD is how much damage was done to the tubes due to the loss of bias. I really don't like the way they get bias and will consider putting in a little 100 volt transformer in the RF section to derive my own bias. In fact it could even be redundant, fed in parallel with the original through a diode. Now I am searching for a replacement bleeder, has to be the exact size as the original because there isn't any extra room in the PS. Gee I'd like to put in a bigger bleeder, because bleeders should not fail. Wonder if Drake considered this senario when the L4 was designed. Maybe so, maybe they figured no serious damage could come to the tubes and eventually the PS failed safe and stopped before the house caught on fire, because this could have happened when I wasn't in the shack. Rick K2XT |
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