[Milsurplus] A Ham Radio Math Quiz.. more

J. Forster jfor at quik.com
Sat Apr 3 19:24:47 EDT 2010


Also, the scope should be hooked ONLY be across the 5 Ohm if you are
trying to measure the real power. Hooked up across the R and C you are
measuring the voltage across the vector sum of the R and C impedances.

With your component values and frequency, by FAR the largest voltage will
be across the 100 pF capacitor and not contribute to the output power.

Zc = about 400 Ohms
Zr = five ohms.

-John

==============



>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Peter Gottlieb" <nerd at verizon.net>
>
>> What's the intent and application of this?
>
> I'm working with a 1930s MOPA transmitter,
> which is speced to deliver about 3 watts out.
> 100 pFd in series with 5 Ohms is the "phantom antenna"
> designed for it.   Scope says 100 Volts PtP or about
> 70 Volts RMS across the load at 3870 KC.
> Z of the load should be about 411 Ohms.
> I know the output is low and I'm not finished looking
> for the cause, but I don't believe the solutions I'm
> getting, so I'd like to see how the many people
> smarter than me solve this problem, so I can
> find my errors.
>
> Thanks,
> Dave S.
>
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