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Re: LF: Permissible QSY limits for 136

To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: LF: Permissible QSY limits for 136
From: Stefan Schäfer <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, 04 Mar 2012 02:34:00 +0100
In-reply-to: <C4D8A43490E449AA8341C0BC5FE90AE8@AGB>
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Am 04.03.2012 02:23, schrieb Graham:
Thanks'  Stefan,  . bit  late in the  night 
 
50 ?  That's  quite  low ,  I was  expecting  much  higher  ? that's  for  a  'large'  system ?
Well if you assume a loss resistance of 50 Ohm and 470 pF for the antenna then its about 50.
OK, 470 pF is much. So then you have Q=100 if C is 235 pF ;-)


do  you  have  a  ball park figure  for the  max  frequency   change  on that  ?
What kind of PA do you run? As long as it is no class E i would do some careful tests, i.e. allow an offset and see what happens after some minutes. However there can be overvoltage problems as well.
 
1:1.5  >  5%  reflected  power , that  would  reduce the  b/w  again  ..
Reflected, eventually this is no problem since e.g. in a H bridge the power is then not dissipated but pushed back into the capacitor again (which has to deal with the higher voltages then).

73, Stefan

 
Tnx -G..

Sent: Sunday, March 04, 2012 1:09 AM
Subject: Re: LF: Permissible QSY limits for 136


Am 04.03.2012 02:01, schrieb Graham:
Permissible QSY limits for 136
 
Q what  is the  average  Q   of  a   136 Khz  Ae  system  ? (back garden  + larger)

Maybe arround 50.

 
Q What  would the  maximum  acceptable  change  in frequency   +/-  Fo   before  swr  considerations  became a problem , say   10%  reflected  power  1 :2  swr ? ....
That depends strongly on the PA circuit. A class E is very critical. A H bridge has almost no problems at all (just lower output power then). I would stay below 1:1.5 if the output power is 70% or above.

73, Stefan

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