[Heathkit] parasitic suppressor
jhoyos at hoth.gcn.ou.edu
jhoyos at hoth.gcn.ou.edu
Sat Aug 25 22:34:21 EDT 2007
A parasitic suppressor, as *most* of us are normally involved with,
creates a trap, (an L/C circuit piece), or block if you wish, that
simply stops the "undesired" frequencies from passing through the
finals, or the linear amplifier.
It can be accomplished by an inductor, (coil), wrapped around a carbon
resistor in the plate lead.
Other suppression methods are in the construction phase of an
amplification stage, for example: Grounding the cathode in an amplifier
tube such as 572Bs or 813s. Bypassing 'other' grids such as control
grid and screen grids with a high voltage disk ceramic capacitor from
pin to ground with ALMOST *NO* lead length.
Bob - N0DGN
If such a supprssor were an LC parallel circuit, its impedance were maximun
at the resonance frequency, so this frecuency would not be attenuated by
the PA because the LC circuit is in series with the anode.
I can not figure how the attenution is accomplished.
Tanks again.
Jorge
HK6BCC
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