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#1
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The link below seems like something hams should have done long ago. I
assume there is some reason not to but thought I would float it here. The front end is easy and has been done many times for Class D and Class E transmitters. The unique part is the stacking of low voltage modulators to achieve high voltage for tubes. Seems like scaling this down to our power levels would be pretty straight forward but I don't happen to know how to do it. Wa1QIX has a PDM Modulator board/kit that I have on order which solves most of the front end details but the series modulator boards are beyond my pay grade. Anyone on this list have any interest or ideas on the subject? http://www.contelec.com/SSM.html Jack K9ACT Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber, Gems, Nature, Radio, Sheep, Sausage, Silver http://schmidling.com |
#2
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On Jul 3, 9:37*am, Jack Schmidling wrote:
The link below seems like something hams should have done long ago. *I assume there is some reason not to but thought I would float it here. The front end is easy and has been done many times for Class D and Class E transmitters. The unique part is the stacking of low voltage modulators to achieve high voltage for tubes. Seems like scaling this down to our power levels would be pretty straight forward but I don't happen to know how to do it. Wa1QIX has a PDM Modulator board/kit that I have on order which solves most of the front end details but the series modulator boards are beyond my pay grade. Anyone on this list have any interest or ideas on the subject? http://www.contelec.com/SSM.html Jack K9ACT Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber, Gems, Nature, Radio, Sheep, Sausage, Silver * * * *http://schmidling.com Seems like mainly you need a way to feed the audio into each of the amplifiers, and power supplies for each amplifier such that the amp can "float" up and down at a high enough rate. That is, any capacitance to ground must be driven by the amplifiers below. The audio input must have good common mode rejection. That's not necessarily terribly difficult, just a requirement. It could be done with transformers, but an interesting variation might be to have an output from each amplifier to drive the amplifier above it in the chain. One other thing: if you are wanting to do it as suggested on the CE page you linked to, you need amplifiers that output nominally 0 to +V, not +/-V, and are happy to deliver highest current at the +V peaks. I assume to start with that you don't need to do the controlled-carrier thing. I suppose to do that you'd want input coupling all the way down to DC. Cheers, Tom |
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