Hello Andy,
OK, I can see the elegance in that, but pardon the probably daft
question, but at the combining output transformer, is its input taken
from my existing output transformers' secondary windings, or do I
remove both of those and the combining transformer takes their place?
How would I work out what toroid and winding wire to use as a single
amp already causes some warming, albeit I believe it is derived from
the primary wire, rather than the ferrite itself being heated. Thanks.
Monday, April 10, 2017, 7:49:36 PM, you wrote:
> Why not keep it simple, and do it like the Decca transmitters?
> Forget complicated splitters/combiners with messy deliberate
> isolation. You are combining identical signals so that sort of design is not
> required.
> BEFORE any low pass filters, take each output of each transmitter
> module to separate identical primary windings on one, normal ferrite
> transformer core. Use a single secondary to take the combined power
> off through a low pass filter to your antenna. (But do size the
> core and turns for the TOTAL power to be generated)
> As both transmitter modules will be delivering identical outputs,
> the voltage induced in primary 2 coil from Tx module 1 will be
> exactly equal to the that delivered to it from Tx module 2 (and
> vice versa) so with both transmitters operating correctly, the
> outputs will sum in the secondary. you are adding teh currents
> delivered by each stage, from an equal voltage delivered by both.
> You are, to all intents and purposes, connecting the transmitters in
> parallel to multiply the current delivered in total
> You can use the combining transformer for impedance matching if
> wanted - for example the Decca ones have direct drive to the
> primary windings via a tank circuit and each of the ( In their case
> three) primary to single-secondary turns ration ratio sets the impedance
> transformation.
> Isolating combiners like Wilkinsons only come into their own
> properly when non-identical signals need to be summed while keeping
> the two sources isolated. Intermod testing in receivers is a
> particular case in point, where the two test signals have to be
> summed without generating their own intermod products caused by the
> output of one source leaking into the (probably non-linear) output
> of the other. If that happened, self-generated IMPS that could swamp those
> being tested-for.
> Andy G4JNT
--
Best regards,
Chris mailto:[email protected]
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