To: | "LF Group \(E-mail\)" <[email protected]> |
---|---|
Subject: | LF: BigPA diagram and Complete DDS Mod ule available |
From: | "Talbot Andrew" <[email protected]> |
Date: | Fri, 25 May 2001 10:12:27 +0100 |
Reply-to: | [email protected] |
Sender: | <[email protected]> |
The circuit diagram of my 700 Watt Switch Mode Tx design as presented at Wimborne has now been posted at : www.lwca.org/miscimg/swmlftx.pcx There is noa ccompanying documentation, so if anyone wants more info please contact med irect. The following should answer 90% of queries : No details are given for the FET driver
transformer. This consists of 12:12+12 turns on RM10 Ungapped
core, 3C85 material. Thew
indings here, at least the primary, give safety isolation from the mains and
should be made of well insulated mains rated wire. The secondaries can be
enameled wire, but they still have full voltage between the windings so need
adequate insulation. I used PTFE insulated wire for all the windings
here.
Setting up the
guard circuit is a matter of trial and error. The transformation ratio is
near to the loaded Q of the circuit, approximately 6 here, but the
number of turns for the secondary winding has to be determined emipirically
(and carefully to avoid blowing FETs !),
as the coupling between the coils is not the
100% it is for a normal transformer. More turns aren
eeded to get the approximately 6:1 transformation ratio required. Setting up the guard circuit is easy if a
current limited (at say 2-3 A) 50 - 100V PSU is used to power the PAi
nstead of the final supply. The actual voltage does not matter, the
guard circuit works on ratios.
My tank coil consists of approximately
90 turns of plastic covered Litz wire in three layers on a piece of 68mm
diameter drain pipe, turns adjusted for 200uH. The guard circuit
winding ended up as around 25 turns (see, its not 6:1 turns ratio)
Unmarked components on the mains input to the PSU are
filtering / EMC components. I took them from a scrap SMPSU rated at 600
Watts. Use whatever you can lay your hands on - but remember that
capacitors that go across the mains, or from mains to ground, need to haves
pecial safety and reliability ratings Class XX or XY - or something liket
hat. Filtering here is important as transients on the mains
could damage the PA and it is a bit naughty feeding lots of harmonics of 137kHz
switching signals back into the supply. Also omitted on the diagram, a
varistor should be connected across the mains input to further absorb any
high energy pulses.
The surge limiting thermistor in the PSU input was
taken from the same SMPSU. It has a cold resistance of about 12 ohms,f
alling to 0.4 ohms when operating.
The output
transformer is wound on an ETD49 core, 3C85 material. This can cope
with 700 Watts - remember, it is a sine waveform, power handlingw
ould be less if a square wave passed through it. The core does run
warm - but not usually too hot to touch and much of the heat in mine is probably
generated in the copper losses rather than the core itself A bigger
core would be better, allowing less turns and copper losses as well asl
ower core loss, but this size is readily available and cheap. The
primary is wound with thick Litz wire (ex Decca / Crawley club) and the
secondary should really be as well although the 1mm enamelled wire I used is
good enough. The Litz must be the plastic covered type to give the
other mains safety barrier.
No key click
filtering or BPSK waveform shaping is possible using the drive circuit
shown. It is up to your conscience or ingenuity as to
what to do about this ! As a saving grace, I use the Tx mainly
via the DDS drive input (for SMT Hell and SLOWCW) rather than by hard keying,
and this does slightly reduce keying sidebands as the DDS
operates with continuous phase.
------------------------------------
Now a for-sale
plug. I have a surplus to requirements fully operational spare
DDS module - exactly as published in RadCom but one of the early breadboards -
completely built up in a tinplate box, with a high stability 94.45MHzB
utler oscillator for the clock included, with buffer amplifier
for outputs up to 30MHz. A trim pot allows adjustment to < 1ppm although
no temperature control is employed. Frequency setting to a resolution
of 0.022Hz is made via the RS232 interface either from my driver software or by
sending the DDS register codes in hexadecimal ASCII from any terminal
software. More details on this module than were given in the RadCom
article are available from the HF Instruments web site, WWW.HF-INST.CO.UK
Any offers to
[email protected] As a price
guide, the commercial version of PCB with DDS chip mounted alone, youb
uild the rest, is £64
Andy
G4JNT
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