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#1
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Hi,
I built the AN762 amp along with 6 low pass filters with parts bought from Communication Concepts. The amp itself (180W version) works fine and can easily produce 180W with 5W input. Now to the problem and question: I wanted to put it in a good solid case with the filters, a RX/TX relay (8A 240V Omron relay also bought at CCI) a manual switch for the filters and the filters. I also found a good heat sink for the PA. I connected all parts with short runs of RG-58, but a lot of the power seems to get lost in this system. If I'm lucky I can get 100W out. Even if I bypass the filters. Is RG58 a bad choice for the internal wirering? Is the manual switch a bad choice? What special things should I address for optimum perfomance? In my case the PA is placed on the back panel direcly mounted on the heat sink. I made a rectangular hole in the back for the PA board. The input and output connectors are also on the back panel. The filters are mounted at the bottom of the box and connected to a band switch mounted on the front panel. Behind the filters and in front of the PA is the RX/TX relay cirucuit. 73 de Michael OZ8AGB |
#2
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Michael wrote:
Hi, I built the AN762 amp along with 6 low pass filters with parts bought from Communication Concepts. The amp itself (180W version) works fine and can easily produce 180W with 5W input. Now to the problem and question: I wanted to put it in a good solid case with the filters, a RX/TX relay (8A 240V Omron relay also bought at CCI) a manual switch for the filters and the filters. I also found a good heat sink for the PA. I connected all parts with short runs of RG-58, but a lot of the power seems to get lost in this system. If I'm lucky I can get 100W out. Even if I bypass the filters. Is RG58 a bad choice for the internal wirering? Is the manual switch a bad choice? What special things should I address for optimum perfomance? In my case the PA is placed on the back panel direcly mounted on the heat sink. I made a rectangular hole in the back for the PA board. The input and output connectors are also on the back panel. The filters are mounted at the bottom of the box and connected to a band switch mounted on the front panel. Behind the filters and in front of the PA is the RX/TX relay cirucuit. 73 de Michael OZ8AGB Is this HF? RG-58 should be fine. RG-174 should be fine for that matter, if this is HF or even VHF. I would suspect that you either have one defective component, a poorly attached connector, or a damaged cable. Assuming that it's linear you could just put 5W in, let it run into a solid dummy load for a while, then feel around the input path for the hot thing. If you're losing 2 watts to one component you'll be able to feel it. If you can you may want to feed the amp it's 5W directly and see if it still gives 180W. If it were me and I was desperate I'd yank the amp out of the case, make sure it was doing 180W on the bench, then put it back in the case checking at every step. So I'd verify 180W with it just bolted in, then verify power through the filters (accepting a bit of loss), then verify power with the case's connectors, etc., until I either found the problem or had my completed amp. -- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com |
#3
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Hi Tim,
Yes it is a linear PA for 1-30MHz. I did disconnect all filters etc. and just connected input and output directly with 2 short pieces of coax. That worked fine. 180W clean output. I'll try out your suggestion and recheck every path and see if I find the "bug". Thanks! 73 Michael "Tim Wescott" wrote in message ... Michael wrote: Hi, I built the AN762 amp along with 6 low pass filters with parts bought from Communication Concepts. The amp itself (180W version) works fine and can easily produce 180W with 5W input. Now to the problem and question: I wanted to put it in a good solid case with the filters, a RX/TX relay (8A 240V Omron relay also bought at CCI) a manual switch for the filters and the filters. I also found a good heat sink for the PA. I connected all parts with short runs of RG-58, but a lot of the power seems to get lost in this system. If I'm lucky I can get 100W out. Even if I bypass the filters. Is RG58 a bad choice for the internal wirering? Is the manual switch a bad choice? What special things should I address for optimum perfomance? In my case the PA is placed on the back panel direcly mounted on the heat sink. I made a rectangular hole in the back for the PA board. The input and output connectors are also on the back panel. The filters are mounted at the bottom of the box and connected to a band switch mounted on the front panel. Behind the filters and in front of the PA is the RX/TX relay cirucuit. 73 de Michael OZ8AGB Is this HF? RG-58 should be fine. RG-174 should be fine for that matter, if this is HF or even VHF. I would suspect that you either have one defective component, a poorly attached connector, or a damaged cable. Assuming that it's linear you could just put 5W in, let it run into a solid dummy load for a while, then feel around the input path for the hot thing. If you're losing 2 watts to one component you'll be able to feel it. If you can you may want to feed the amp it's 5W directly and see if it still gives 180W. If it were me and I was desperate I'd yank the amp out of the case, make sure it was doing 180W on the bench, then put it back in the case checking at every step. So I'd verify 180W with it just bolted in, then verify power through the filters (accepting a bit of loss), then verify power with the case's connectors, etc., until I either found the problem or had my completed amp. -- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com |
#4
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Hi Tim,
Yes it is a linear PA for 1-30MHz. I did disconnect all filters etc. and just connected input and output directly with 2 short pieces of coax. That worked fine. 180W clean output. I'll try out your suggestion and recheck every path and see if I find the "bug". Thanks! 73 Michael "Tim Wescott" wrote in message ... Michael wrote: Hi, I built the AN762 amp along with 6 low pass filters with parts bought from Communication Concepts. The amp itself (180W version) works fine and can easily produce 180W with 5W input. Now to the problem and question: I wanted to put it in a good solid case with the filters, a RX/TX relay (8A 240V Omron relay also bought at CCI) a manual switch for the filters and the filters. I also found a good heat sink for the PA. I connected all parts with short runs of RG-58, but a lot of the power seems to get lost in this system. If I'm lucky I can get 100W out. Even if I bypass the filters. Is RG58 a bad choice for the internal wirering? Is the manual switch a bad choice? What special things should I address for optimum perfomance? In my case the PA is placed on the back panel direcly mounted on the heat sink. I made a rectangular hole in the back for the PA board. The input and output connectors are also on the back panel. The filters are mounted at the bottom of the box and connected to a band switch mounted on the front panel. Behind the filters and in front of the PA is the RX/TX relay cirucuit. 73 de Michael OZ8AGB Is this HF? RG-58 should be fine. RG-174 should be fine for that matter, if this is HF or even VHF. I would suspect that you either have one defective component, a poorly attached connector, or a damaged cable. Assuming that it's linear you could just put 5W in, let it run into a solid dummy load for a while, then feel around the input path for the hot thing. If you're losing 2 watts to one component you'll be able to feel it. If you can you may want to feed the amp it's 5W directly and see if it still gives 180W. If it were me and I was desperate I'd yank the amp out of the case, make sure it was doing 180W on the bench, then put it back in the case checking at every step. So I'd verify 180W with it just bolted in, then verify power through the filters (accepting a bit of loss), then verify power with the case's connectors, etc., until I either found the problem or had my completed amp. -- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com |
#5
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I built the AN762 amp along with 6 low pass filters with parts bought from
Communication Concepts. Hi Michael, Just some thoughts on your problems with the AN762. I connected all parts with short runs of RG-58, but a lot of the power seems to get lost in this system. If I'm lucky I can get 100W out. The short runs of RG-58 should not produce any noticeable loss. I would look at Tx/Rx relay and the filter bandswitch. Another thing to consider is how you determined the power gain of the PA before and after you put it in the enclosure. Make sure all the measurement parameters (frequency ect.) are exactly the same. Another thing to remember is that the circuit board is the only thing that has a power gain. All the cabling, switches, and relays will have some loss. If you are losing 80 watts, it is probably in one section, and it should get pretty hot. Of course the circuit board will get hot, it does in normal operation. Look for some of the stuff you added getting hot. Also does the circuit board get hotter now than it did before you enclosed it? 73 Gary N4AST |
#6
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If the filter bank is on the rear panel and the filter switch is on the
front panel, it sure sounds to me like that long, circuitous path could be the problem. I'd try eliminating the filter switching and see if the performance returns to normal. Also be sure that whatever surface the connectors are mounted on have a very good and short ground path back to appropriate place on the board. Joe W3JDR Michael wrote in message ... Hi, I built the AN762 amp along with 6 low pass filters with parts bought from Communication Concepts. The amp itself (180W version) works fine and can easily produce 180W with 5W input. Now to the problem and question: I wanted to put it in a good solid case with the filters, a RX/TX relay (8A 240V Omron relay also bought at CCI) a manual switch for the filters and the filters. I also found a good heat sink for the PA. I connected all parts with short runs of RG-58, but a lot of the power seems to get lost in this system. If I'm lucky I can get 100W out. Even if I bypass the filters. Is RG58 a bad choice for the internal wirering? Is the manual switch a bad choice? What special things should I address for optimum perfomance? In my case the PA is placed on the back panel direcly mounted on the heat sink. I made a rectangular hole in the back for the PA board. The input and output connectors are also on the back panel. The filters are mounted at the bottom of the box and connected to a band switch mounted on the front panel. Behind the filters and in front of the PA is the RX/TX relay cirucuit. 73 de Michael OZ8AGB |
#7
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Thank you all!
I think I had a bad coax. During my bug finding I changed a couple of cables and now 180W clean on all bands. Thanks again! Vy 73 de Michael OZ8AGB "Joe Rocci" wrote in message news:_Umjd.1105$Tz3.178@trndny08... If the filter bank is on the rear panel and the filter switch is on the front panel, it sure sounds to me like that long, circuitous path could be the problem. I'd try eliminating the filter switching and see if the performance returns to normal. Also be sure that whatever surface the connectors are mounted on have a very good and short ground path back to appropriate place on the board. Joe W3JDR Michael wrote in message ... Hi, I built the AN762 amp along with 6 low pass filters with parts bought from Communication Concepts. The amp itself (180W version) works fine and can easily produce 180W with 5W input. Now to the problem and question: I wanted to put it in a good solid case with the filters, a RX/TX relay (8A 240V Omron relay also bought at CCI) a manual switch for the filters and the filters. I also found a good heat sink for the PA. I connected all parts with short runs of RG-58, but a lot of the power seems to get lost in this system. If I'm lucky I can get 100W out. Even if I bypass the filters. Is RG58 a bad choice for the internal wirering? Is the manual switch a bad choice? What special things should I address for optimum perfomance? In my case the PA is placed on the back panel direcly mounted on the heat sink. I made a rectangular hole in the back for the PA board. The input and output connectors are also on the back panel. The filters are mounted at the bottom of the box and connected to a band switch mounted on the front panel. Behind the filters and in front of the PA is the RX/TX relay cirucuit. 73 de Michael OZ8AGB |
#8
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Michael wrote:
Thank you all! I think I had a bad coax. During my bug finding I changed a couple of cables and now 180W clean on all bands. Thanks again! Vy 73 de Michael OZ8AGB Hi Michael, Do you have any photos of your amplifier? I am building an amplifier based on the AN758 kit and filters from CCI.. 300W from a 48V supply. I am looking for ideas for mounting the boards in the box etc. 73 Hamish VK3SB |
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