[Elecraft] K2/100 and RTTY / PSK31 duty cycles
W3FPR - Don Wilhelm
w3fpr at earthlink.net
Thu May 5 20:06:40 EDT 2005
Bill,
I myself have been wondering about the recommendation for 25 watts vs. the
40 watts - BUT,
The real fact is that the amount of heat is the real determining factor.
One must give consideration for the transmit/receive cycles as well as the
duty cycle of the actual transmitted signal. If the transmit time is
reduced, the ratings can be increased.
I know that does not provide a really concise answer - so you will have to
create your own based on your typical transmit vs. receive times for
whatever mode you are planning ot use.
You may want to add an auxilary fan to the KPA100 - a 12 volt muffin fan rom
a defunct computer power supply works great - just lay it flat on the KPA100
heat sink positioned so it draws air away from the heat sink. You can even
add a series resistor to slow the fan a bit and reduce the noise. Monitor
the temperature rise and experiment with the series resistor so you end up
with a decent operating temperature for whatever mode you are using.
73,
Don W3FPR
> -----Original Message-----
> I'm just starting to get into RTTY with my K2 and I'm wondering how
> much power I should use.
>
> The KPA100 manual recommends 40 watts, with 25 watts for "higher-duty
> cycle modes such as MFSK".
>
> Now, this statement confuses me for two reasons. First, where does 40
> watts come from? The KPA100 is rated for 100 watts of CW. Since CW has
> a 50% duty cycle, it would seem that the raw heat dissipation of the
> KPA100 should handle 50 watts of the 100% duty cycle of RTTY.
>
> So, how do we arrive at 40 watts? Is the KPA100 less efficient when
> producing 40-50 watts than it is producing 100 watts?
>
> Second question -- how can one have a "higher" duty cycle than 100%?
> Can someone explain how MFSK can produce more of a strain on the
> amplifier than being directly keyed down on a single tone continously?
>
>
> Bill Coleman, AA4LR, PP-ASEL Mail: aa4lr at arrl.net
> Quote: "Not within a thousand years will man ever fly!"
> -- Wilbur Wright, 1901
>
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