To: | peter.chadwick@zarlink.com, amps@contesting.com |
---|---|
Subject: | Re: [Amps] Parasitics |
From: | Bill Fuqua <wlfuqu00@uky.edu> |
Date: | Thu, 21 Aug 2003 09:44:42 -0400 |
List-post: | <mailto:amps@contesting.com> |
There are a number of types of parasitic oscillations. In grounded
grid amplifiers the most common is VHF. But there is a fundamental mode as
well but more often occurs in common cathode amplifiers ( tuned grid-tuned
plate oscillation) but does show up in poorly constructed grounded grid
amplifiers. A very rare type is a low frequency parasitic oscillation. I
have encountered this twice in the past 10 years. Once when tracking down a
paging system that was getting into repeaters in the area. Using a
spectrum analyzer I could see the offending paging system with 2 sidebands
drifting 4 to 6 MHz on either side of the stable signal. It was sometimes
getting into the local police and fire repeaters as well. This was a 150
MHz paging system with a 5 MHz low frequency ( drifting )parasitic
oscillation. These are usually caused by resonance in the RF chokes with
other components. The strangest low fequency oscillation was in a 15 MHz 300 watt amplifier used in our linear accelerator. This amplifier had large 30 Hz amplitude oscillation. Being solid state ( copied from Motorola Application Notes) it used feedback to establish a constant gain. The advantage of this is that it did not require a regulated power supply or even a very well filtered one. After making some measurements I discovered that the output of the unregulated power supply was oscillating at 30Hz which is strange because it runs off a 400Hz power source. The problem was that under the right conditions the LC filter in the power supply ( resonant at 30 Hz) and the amplifier together formed a low frequency oscillator while trying to amplify a 15 MHz signal. After a bit I realized that the amplifier appeared to be a negative resistance to the power supply and its LC filter. Think about it, the gain of the amplifier is constant ( determined by negative feedback) . And if the efficiency remains constant or increases with an increase of the supply voltage the supply current must drop to maintain a constant input power, and drop even more if the efficiency increases with supply voltage. That is negative resistance. The solution was to simply reduce the Q of the LC filter ( added a smaller bleeder resister). 73 Bill wa4lav At 07:58 AM 8/21/2003 +0100, peter.chadwick@Zarlink.Com wrote: There's a header that should wake people up!
|
<Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread> |
---|---|---|
|
Previous by Date: | Re: [Amps] pink ceramics, Ian White, G3SEK |
---|---|
Next by Date: | Re: [Amps] Parasitics, rlm |
Previous by Thread: | [Amps] Parasitics, peter . chadwick |
Next by Thread: | Re: [Amps] Parasitics, Steve |
Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |