I did measure the voltage at the tube pins. I haven't measured it while
transmitting, because the RF drives my meter crazy. I assume the voltage
drops a bit. Unfortunately I no longer have my trusty analog voltmeter.
I wish I did.
I'll measure the line voltage. But the only thing I can think of that
would cause that to increase after long transmissions would be if the
breaker on the line heated up and lost resistance. I have never heard of
that!
73,
Victor, 4X6GP
Rehovot, Israel
CWops #5
Formerly K2VCO
https://www.qsl.net/k2vco/
On 05/06/2022 6:19, Jim W7RY wrote:
*I'm curious Vic...*
*See below"*
On 6/4/2022 4:35 AM, Victor Rosenthal 4X6GP wrote:
This isn't a problem, just a phenomenon that I would like to understand.
I have a TL922. Mods include directly grounded grids. I also measured
the filament voltage with my Fluke true RMS meter and put a small
resistor in the primary of the filament transformer to provide exactly
5.0v in standby.
*Where did you measure this voltage. Best is to wrap a small wire around
the tube pins, (all 3 of them) and measure the voltage at each tube.*
It has been running with the same genuine Eimac 3-500Zs in it for
about 6 years.
So here is what happens: after a longish CW transmission, the power
output INCREASES. On 20m, for example, it may go from 1200 to 1400
watts. When it cools, the power drops back.
I've noticed this with several wattmeters. I have observed no change
in SWR when this happens (it's 1:1 thanks to a Johnson KW Matchbox).
It happens when the amp is driven with an Elecraft K3 and also a TS890s.
I'm interested in hearing theories about why this might occur.
*I cant add anything about what your seeing... Other than is the line
voltage changing?
*
*73, Jim W7RY*
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