I can only get it to work satisfactorily on 20 meters – on the 20 meter band, I can tune out the reactance with an antenna tuner – coax cable length to the d…
I can only get it to work satisfactorily on 20 meters – on the 20 meter band, I can tune out the reactance with an antenna tuner – coax cable length to the d…
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Congratulations, you’ve learned the difference between DCR (DC Resistance)
and AC Impedance. Even if the load resistors aren’t wirewound, a straight
piece of wire exhibits series inductive reactance at RF. Likely, you have
capacitive reactance tuning out the inductive reactance at higher
frequencies, and not enough capacitive reactance to tune it out on lower
frequencies.
Even if you get it to play electrically, you still have the issue of
getting rid of the heat. This design (as is the root Heath pn HN31
“Cantenna” design) is inefficient in that regard. I see nothing to remove
the heat from the container. For continuous operation, consider some form
of liquid-to-air heat exchanger.
OTOH, I used four 50 Ohm / 400W flange-mount RF resistors on two heatsinks
for a DL that can handle 1500W at 100% duty cycle as long as the fan is
blowing (no liquid involved). Cooling was verified using an inexpensive
LM35DT temperature measurement IC, and a 40.68 MHZ ISM RF power source. My
design with short connections resulted in VSWR under 1.5:1 thru 54 MHz.
Reasonably-priced RF power resistors can be found from various vendors on
ebay.
I don’t know much, but the first thing that comes to mind is you got lucky
and built it to the right size, and on any other frequency band the
resonance is causing the signal to be reflected?
a heating element has an inductance and ther for reactance a dummy load
should be purely restive
Can’t answer your question, unfortunately, but I do the odd transceiver
repair and after watching your previous dummy load video, it did cross my
mind to make one for this work. Definitely watching with interest.
Something to do with the oil perhaps? I am assuming it is oil filled.
Jon.
Are you talking about this: 20 m Band (14.000 MHz-14.350 MHz)?
Then we do some little math here:
You described your Rc to 47muF, ok as for the Xc it is 1/(2*pi*f*c) is
aprox 50Ohm correct is 50R – 0.000235Xc (minus 90 degres because the
reflection will be positive or PreFlexions which i call them;) at 14Mhz….
For the groundig impedance you´ll have to add 0.01Xc reflection resistance
to the 50Ohms….(same math as above with 684.5pf without Real R because we
already know it´s 50Ohms)
So no reflections nither through the cable nor to ground..
For full detail we still need Xl so you have to measure the L of this
thing.May its adding some real amount Xl so it will not cancel out on lower
frequency or it will may produce more Xl than Xc and will add some
ringing….
It´s by far more easier to draw it on a Xl/Xc L/C V/F circle diagram to
work the whole thing out.
But for the Xc it works out just fine!
Have fun! :)
you need to use non inductive resistors…. that’s why….
Wow, you lucked out. I tried so called non inductive wire wound resistors
to make a dummy load and I know of another dummy load that was made up of a
whole mess of 1k ohm 5 watt resistors. In both cases, the inductance
introduced was intolerable and it took a huge capacitor in a homebrewed
tuner to come anywhere near a fair match.
After a reasonable amount of work with this dummy load my conclusions are:
(1) these elements may be rated collectively at 10,500 watts as heater
elements for water heaters but at 14.2 MHz they can only safely dissipate
1.5 KW for about 15 minutes before the water (2 gallons) reaches 150 F and
is boiling around the elements. (2) Obviously, these elements are not made
for RF and I can only get this dummy load to work satisfactorily, using an
antenna tuner between the load and the transmitter, on the 20 meter band –
so… proceed with caution if you build this device and don’t expect it to
perform like a high quality commercial RF dummy load.