I'm operating my K2/100 (KPA100+KAT100 in EC2) from Ham Radio Deluxe,
which works just great. But just now I was playing around with the HRD power control slider and discovered some anomalies. If I set the power on the K2 to say 50w, then move the HRD power slider down to < 11 w, the LCD power readout on the K2 follows the HRD slider down appropriately, but the KAT100 PWR RANGE LED stays in HIGH. If I then transmit, the power is actually what I set it to (<11w). So does that mean that I'm driving the KPA100 at QRP levels instead of using the K2 PA and bypassing the KPA100??? Moving the slider to other power levels (without moving the K2 power control) results in the same thing - power out follows the HRD slider, but the PWR RANGE LED stays at HIGH no matter if the power is set to <11w. Now if I start with the K2 power control at <11w, first of all, HRD displays 10x the actual power setting (i.e., 100 for 10w). That's easy to get used to. But if I crank the HRD slider up beyond 10w (e.g., HRD slider to 150 or 15w), the actual power output, and the K2 LCD power display, go to 15w, but the KAT100 PWR RANGE LED stays in LOW. Again does that mean that I'm driving the K2 PA to 15w and not going through the KPA100??? Is this a HRD "issue" or a K2 CAT command issue??? Kinda strange! 73, Randy, KS4L ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
Randy,
If your K2 firmware is less than version 2.02e then the problem is with your K2 firmware. If the firmware is 2.02e or greater, then HRD is the problem. What version of HRD are you using? If it is an older one, that may be your problem. See the K2 Programmer's Reference. The Extended form of the PC command must be used to change the power from the low range to the high range. I don't know whether Simon has implemented the Extended version of the PC command in his software. You may want to ask that question on the HRD forum. I cannot check it out here, I have only the QRP K2 and no KAT100. 73, Don W3FPR Randy Moore wrote: > I'm operating my K2/100 (KPA100+KAT100 in EC2) from Ham Radio Deluxe, > which works just great. But just now I was playing around with the HRD > power control slider and discovered some anomalies. > > If I set the power on the K2 to say 50w, then move the HRD power slider > down to < 11 w, the LCD power readout on the K2 follows the HRD slider > down appropriately, but the KAT100 PWR RANGE LED stays in HIGH. If I > then transmit, the power is actually what I set it to (<11w). So does > that mean that I'm driving the KPA100 at QRP levels instead of using the > K2 PA and bypassing the KPA100??? Moving the slider to other power > levels (without moving the K2 power control) results in the same thing - > power out follows the HRD slider, but the PWR RANGE LED stays at HIGH no > matter if the power is set to <11w. > > Now if I start with the K2 power control at <11w, first of all, HRD > displays 10x the actual power setting (i.e., 100 for 10w). That's easy > to get used to. But if I crank the HRD slider up beyond 10w (e.g., HRD > slider to 150 or 15w), the actual power output, and the K2 LCD power > display, go to 15w, but the KAT100 PWR RANGE LED stays in LOW. Again > does that mean that I'm driving the K2 PA to 15w and not going through > the KPA100??? > > Is this a HRD "issue" or a K2 CAT command issue??? > > Kinda strange! > > 73, > Randy, KS4L > ______________________________________________________________ > Elecraft mailing list > Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft > Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm > Post: mailto:[hidden email] > > This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net > Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG - www.avg.com > Version: 8.5.325 / Virus Database: 270.12.24/2108 - Release Date: 05/11/09 05:52:00 > > Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
Don,
My K2 is running 2.04r and I have HRD 4.1 Build 2055 Beta, which I think is the most recent. My real question is what is happening in the KPA100 and the K2 when this happens? Practically speaking, it isn't much of an operational problem. 73, Randy, KS4L Don Wilhelm wrote: > Randy, > > If your K2 firmware is less than version 2.02e then the problem is > with your K2 firmware. > If the firmware is 2.02e or greater, then HRD is the problem. What > version of HRD are you using? If it is an older one, that may be your > problem. > > See the K2 Programmer's Reference. The Extended form of the PC > command must be used to change the power from the low range to the > high range. > > I don't know whether Simon has implemented the Extended version of the > PC command in his software. You may want to ask that question on the > HRD forum. > > I cannot check it out here, I have only the QRP K2 and no KAT100. > > 73, > Don W3FPR Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
Randy,
That tells me that HRD is not using the extended PC command format. The consequences of going from high power to low is that the scaling resistors in the KAT100 will be active (they would normally switch out of the circuit going from high to low power), and the power detection at low power (<11 watts) will be incorrect - there will not be as much voltage on the VRFDET line as the K2 is expecting and the K2 power control circuits will try to increase the power to bring up the VRFDET voltage. The result will be either high power output (i.e 100 watts instead of 10 watts) *if* the KPA100 is also in high power state like the KAT100 or if the KPA100 is in low power state (but not the KAT100, the base K2 will put out maximum power and may give HI CUR messages. Alternately if the KAT100 stays in low power mode, the KPA100 will only have 1/10 the expected power. Since HRD apparently does not do the low power/hi power switching, I would recommend that you operate only within either the low power range or the high power range when changing the power through HRD. To switch ranges, use the K2 power knob and then proceed with HRD as normal. 73, Don W3FPR Randy Moore wrote: > Don, > > My K2 is running 2.04r and I have HRD 4.1 Build 2055 Beta, which I think > is the most recent. > > My real question is what is happening in the KPA100 and the K2 when this > happens? Practically speaking, it isn't much of an operational problem. > > 73, > Randy, KS4L > > Don Wilhelm wrote: > >> Randy, >> >> If your K2 firmware is less than version 2.02e then the problem is >> with your K2 firmware. >> If the firmware is 2.02e or greater, then HRD is the problem. What >> version of HRD are you using? If it is an older one, that may be your >> problem. >> >> See the K2 Programmer's Reference. The Extended form of the PC >> command must be used to change the power from the low range to the >> high range. >> >> I don't know whether Simon has implemented the Extended version of the >> PC command in his software. You may want to ask that question on the >> HRD forum. >> >> I cannot check it out here, I have only the QRP K2 and no KAT100. >> >> 73, >> Don W3FPR >> > ______________________________________________________________ > Elecraft mailing list > Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft > Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm > Post: mailto:[hidden email] > > This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net > Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG - www.avg.com > Version: 8.5.329 / Virus Database: 270.12.26/2110 - Release Date: 05/12/09 06:22:00 > > Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
In reply to this post by Don Wilhelm-4
Don:
Regarding the complex impedance of an antenna at the end point, you raise some interesting questions. I was always of the impression that the definition of resonance of a half wave radiator is the condition in which the current at the center is a maximum and the current at the ends is at zero. The current distribution in a half wave antenna is analogous to the displacement of a violin string, which when vibrating at resonance has zero displacement at the ends and maximum displacement at the center. (Such a resonance is easily detected with a grid dip meter, even if no feedline at all is connected to the radiator. Admittedly, the feedpoint would need to be shorted. Sweeping the grid dip meter through a range of frequencies is analogous to the broadband energy in the "pluck" on the violin string. In either case (assuming very high Q), only the energy at the resonant frequency actually gets coupled into the device.) In the case of center fed half wave element, a zero value of imaginary component of impedance at a center feed point is a coincidental indication of antenna resonance rather than the definition of antenna resonance; it is used by amateurs because it is easy to measure, whereas the current distribution is almost impossible to measure directly. If you run the "BY dipole" simulation on EZNEC at a frequency and radiator length for which the center feedpoint impedance is pure resistance, and then move the feedpoint around, the radiation pattern comes out just the same (within the limits of computational error) regardless of the feedpoint location. Also, the magnitude of the current distribution remains about the same, big in the center and approaching zero at the ends. Thus, my sense is that by the analogy to the violin string, the antenna is resonant at that length for that frequency irrespective of the feedpoint location, or the fact that the feedpoint impedance is complex. Admittedly, that much of the discussion is literally academic, depending on how we define resonance. However, you raise another question that is more practical than academic. You make the perfectly reasonable point that if I play around with the radiator length, I should find a length that has an end feedpoint impedance of some big value of R plus J0. I am sure you can do that, but my question to you is, what is the advantage to doing so? (Note: This is not intended as a smart aleck comment. If there is some advantage easily obtained by tweaking the radiator length, I'd really like to know what it is.) I do not expect that minimizing radiation from the transmission line is one of those advantages. Changing the radiator length such that you move away from the length that gives "violin string resonance" would make the current distribution on the radiator more asymmetrical and would increase the probability of feed line radiation. This line of reasoning got me curious about something else. Elecraft rigs are usually rated as being able to operate normally for any load that has an SWR of 2 or less compared to a characteristic impedance of 50+J0. Am I correct in assuming that that means that the rig expected to be able to operate normally into any complex load on or inside the SWR = 2 circle on the Smith Chart? Why that matters is the following. Using a high impedance quarter wave (approximately) transformer to Zepp feed a half wave radiator, it is relatively straightforward to tweak the transformer length such that the subsequent 50 Ohm coax has an SWR well inside the SWR = 2 circle. If so, the Elecraft rig should be perfectly happy, even if I seldom if ever actually find an impedance with a zero imaginary component. Have I missed something in my thinking? (It would not be the first time.) TNX & 73, Steve Kercel AA4AK ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
> I was always of the impression that the definition of resonance of a
> half wave radiator is the condition in which the current at the center > is a maximum and the current at the ends is at zero. This would also be true of a 1/4 wave dipole fed in the center, or any dipole less than a 1/2 wave. The current would be higher in the center of a less than 1/2 wave dipole, than it would be for the same power fed to the center of a 1/2 wave dipole. No one to my knowledge considers a 1/4 wave dipole "resonant". I'm not aware of any standard reference that does not define as resonant a 1/2 wave dipole having zero reactance at a center feed. The classic Terman's shows overall circuit current at "resonance" as being entirely resistive. {p.46, Electronic and Radio Engineering 4th Edition, F E Terman, McGraw Hill, 1955} For the dipole this would be the point that the undissipated power from prior excitation returns exactly in phase with incident excitation. This is your grid dip meter case of maximum accepted power, hence maximum dip, and also where a center feed displays zero reactive current. Perhaps a better definition of a wire resonant at a given frequency would be *if there exists* a point on the wire where a feed so placed would not exhibit any reactance. This takes in other cases than center fed 1/2 wave dipoles. 73, Guy. ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
Guy:
Interesting points. 73, Steve AA4AK Guy Olinger, K2AV wrote: >> I was always of the impression that the definition of resonance of a >> half wave radiator is the condition in which the current at the center >> is a maximum and the current at the ends is at zero. > > This would also be true of a 1/4 wave dipole fed in the center, or any > dipole less than a 1/2 wave. The current would be higher in the > center of a less than 1/2 wave dipole, than it would be for the same > power fed to the center of a 1/2 wave dipole. No one to my knowledge > considers a 1/4 wave dipole "resonant". > > I'm not aware of any standard reference that does not define as > resonant a 1/2 wave dipole having zero reactance at a center feed. The > classic Terman's shows overall circuit current at "resonance" as being > entirely resistive. {p.46, Electronic and Radio Engineering 4th > Edition, F E Terman, McGraw Hill, 1955} > > For the dipole this would be the point that the undissipated power > from prior excitation returns exactly in phase with incident > excitation. This is your grid dip meter case of maximum accepted > power, hence maximum dip, and also where a center feed displays zero > reactive current. > > Perhaps a better definition of a wire resonant at a given frequency > would be *if there exists* a point on the wire where a feed so placed > would not exhibit any reactance. This takes in other cases than center > fed 1/2 wave dipoles. > > 73, Guy. > > ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
In reply to this post by Guy, K2AV
Guy and Steve,
AFAIK, the condition of zero reactance *defines* resonance whether that be a dipole or a tuned circuit using lumped components. On a dipole of any length (whether resonant or not), the current must be zero at the ends (there is no place for it to go - it is an open circuit). If that dipole is less than 1/2 wavelength long, the current will be a maximum at the center - lets restrict the discussion to 1/2 wave or less for simplicity. The thing which changes as the feedpoint is moved along the antenna is the feedpoint impedance - it can be fed at any point - the impedance will be lowest in the center and highest at the ends. If you plot both the voltage and the current along an antenna, you can get an *idea* about the feedpoint impedance at any point by dividing the voltage by the current (there are other factors like the radiation resistance, so that is not exact) - in the center, the voltage is low but the current is high, so the impedance (V/I) is low and it becomes larger as you move toward either end of the dipole. If the reactance is zero at any feedpoint, it will be zero no matter how the feedpoint is moved - that fact only occurs if the wire is resonant - if there is any reactance, the values of resistance and reactance will move about the constant SWR circle on a Smith chart. Steve, your analogy of a guitar string is OK, but what you are stating only applies at resonance - and is thus comparable only to a half wave dipole. The fact is that a wire of any length can be made to take power at any frequency by feeding it with the conjugate of its feed impedance - and a transmission line section can easily provide that at certain lengths and characteristic impedances (or a lumped element network like a tuner). I cannot think of an easy analogy to that for a vibrating string feedpoint. Maybe the MEs in this group can provide that mechanical analogy. 73, Don W3FPR Guy Olinger, K2AV wrote: >> I was always of the impression that the definition of resonance of a >> half wave radiator is the condition in which the current at the center >> is a maximum and the current at the ends is at zero. >> > > This would also be true of a 1/4 wave dipole fed in the center, or any > dipole less than a 1/2 wave. The current would be higher in the center of a > less than 1/2 wave dipole, than it would be for the same power fed to the > center of a 1/2 wave dipole. No one to my knowledge considers a 1/4 wave > dipole "resonant". > > I'm not aware of any standard reference that does not define as resonant a > 1/2 wave dipole having zero reactance at a center feed. The classic Terman's > shows overall circuit current at "resonance" as being entirely resistive. > {p.46, Electronic and Radio Engineering 4th Edition, F E Terman, McGraw > Hill, 1955} > > For the dipole this would be the point that the undissipated power from > prior excitation returns exactly in phase with incident excitation. This is > your grid dip meter case of maximum accepted power, hence maximum dip, and > also where a center feed displays zero reactive current. > > Perhaps a better definition of a wire resonant at a given frequency would be > *if there exists* a point on the wire where a feed so placed would not > exhibit any reactance. This takes in other cases than center fed 1/2 wave > dipoles. > > 73, Guy. > > Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
Don:
Your points are well taken. TNX & 73, Steve AA4AK Don Wilhelm wrote: > Guy and Steve, > > AFAIK, the condition of zero reactance *defines* resonance whether > that be a dipole or a tuned circuit using lumped components. > > On a dipole of any length (whether resonant or not), the current must > be zero at the ends (there is no place for it to go - it is an open > circuit). If that dipole is less than 1/2 wavelength long, the > current will be a maximum at the center - lets restrict the discussion > to 1/2 wave or less for simplicity. The thing which changes as the > feedpoint is moved along the antenna is the feedpoint impedance - it > can be fed at any point - the impedance will be lowest in the center > and highest at the ends. > If you plot both the voltage and the current along an antenna, you can > get an *idea* about the feedpoint impedance at any point by dividing > the voltage by the current (there are other factors like the radiation > resistance, so that is not exact) - in the center, the voltage is low > but the current is high, so the impedance (V/I) is low and it becomes > larger as you move toward either end of the dipole. > If the reactance is zero at any feedpoint, it will be zero no matter > how the feedpoint is moved - that fact only occurs if the wire is > resonant - if there is any reactance, the values of resistance and > reactance will move about the constant SWR circle on a Smith chart. > > Steve, your analogy of a guitar string is OK, but what you are stating > only applies at resonance - and is thus comparable only to a half wave > dipole. The fact is that a wire of any length can be made to take > power at any frequency by feeding it with the conjugate of its feed > impedance - and a transmission line section can easily provide that at > certain lengths and characteristic impedances (or a lumped element > network like a tuner). I cannot think of an easy analogy to that for > a vibrating string feedpoint. Maybe the MEs in this group can provide > that mechanical analogy. > > 73, > Don W3FPR > > > Guy Olinger, K2AV wrote: >>> I was always of the impression that the definition of resonance of a >>> half wave radiator is the condition in which the current at the center >>> is a maximum and the current at the ends is at zero. >>> >> >> This would also be true of a 1/4 wave dipole fed in the center, or >> any dipole less than a 1/2 wave. The current would be higher in the >> center of a less than 1/2 wave dipole, than it would be for the same >> power fed to the center of a 1/2 wave dipole. No one to my knowledge >> considers a 1/4 wave dipole "resonant". >> >> I'm not aware of any standard reference that does not define as >> resonant a 1/2 wave dipole having zero reactance at a center feed. >> The classic Terman's shows overall circuit current at "resonance" as >> being entirely resistive. {p.46, Electronic and Radio Engineering 4th >> Edition, F E Terman, McGraw Hill, 1955} >> >> For the dipole this would be the point that the undissipated power >> from prior excitation returns exactly in phase with incident >> excitation. This is your grid dip meter case of maximum accepted >> power, hence maximum dip, and also where a center feed displays zero >> reactive current. >> >> Perhaps a better definition of a wire resonant at a given frequency >> would be *if there exists* a point on the wire where a feed so placed >> would not exhibit any reactance. This takes in other cases than >> center fed 1/2 wave dipoles. >> >> 73, Guy. > ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
In reply to this post by Don Wilhelm-4
Don Wilhelm wrote:
> dipole. The fact is that a wire of any length can be made to take power > at any frequency by feeding it with the conjugate of its feed impedance Although I agree with most of the preceding, the above statement hints at a common misunderstanding. In general, you do not want to feed an antenna from a source impedance that is the the complex conjugate of its impedance. Doing so guarantees that you cannot exceed 50% efficiency. Whilst such matching will give you the highest power for any given open circuit voltage, it will not give you the highest output power for a given input power. When one says is a transmitter is matched to 50 ohms, one actually means that its output network presents the optimum load to the finals when feeding a 50 ohm load. -- David Woolley "The Elecraft list is a forum for the discussion of topics related to Elecraft products and more general topics related ham radio" List Guidelines <http://www.elecraft.com/elecraft_list_guidelines.htm> ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
David,
You are correct, this *is* a common point of misunderstanding. You referred to the driving "source impedance" in your statement, and I believe that is the source of the misunderstanding. What you say is true about the driving generator. Amplifiers are designed for some efficiency into some load - in our case, usually 50 ohms, and whatever the amplifier designer must do to make that happen is up to the designer. However, to obtain maximum power transfer *into* the antenna, the antenna and feedline must have an impedance that matches the output impedance of the amplifier - we all strive to match our antennas to a 50 ohm load (or an SWR of 1:1 based on a 50 ohm system). We typically adjust the parameters of an antenna system to have an input impedance of 50 +j0 ohms in order to obtain the maximum power into the antenna (because that the the load the amplifier needs to see for proper in-spec operation). To accomplish that, we might have a tuner of some nature between the transmitter and the input of the feedline. If the antenna feedline has an impedance of (for example) 120 +j30. then the matching network will have an input impedance of 50 +j0 and an output impedance of 120 - j30 -- that is as far as it goes. I stand on my statement (but will not extend it to the internals of amplifier design) - it is only related to feedline and antenna matching. Consider that if one builds a matched antenna system at some frequency as I described above and terminates it at the transmitter end with a 50 ohm pure resistive dummy load. Now split the feedline at any point and measure the impedance of both the open ends created by the split - you will measure an R+jX impedance in one direction and an R-jX impedance in the other direction - that is a conjugate match. If it is something other than that, there will be significant loss in the antenna system. Yes, if we put a theoretical (equivalent circuit) generator on that 50 ohm feedpoint, that theoretical generator must have an internal resistance of 50 +j0 ohms to achieve maximum power transfer between that theoretical generator and the antenna feed - and the power dissipated by that theoretical resistance on the theoretical generator will be the same as that delivered to the load. However, real amplifiers are not usually built the same way we create equivalent circuits. We do know that amplifier efficiencies can be much higher than 50%. When we replace the real amplifier with an equivalent circuit, that will contain a driving generator of zero loss and a series resistance of 50 ohms, but we never analyze the internals of an equivalent circuit, it is only the *representation* of the driving source which makes the system being analyzed behave as though the real generator (amplifier) were driving it. 73, Don W3FPR > > Although I agree with most of the preceding, the above statement hints > at a common misunderstanding. In general, you do not want to feed an > antenna from a source impedance that is the the complex conjugate of its > impedance. Doing so guarantees that you cannot exceed 50% efficiency. > > Whilst such matching will give you the highest power for any given open > circuit voltage, it will not give you the highest output power for a > given input power. > > When one says is a transmitter is matched to 50 ohms, one actually means > that its output network presents the optimum load to the finals when > feeding a 50 ohm load. > > Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
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