Solid State Amps

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Solid State Amps

k0wa@swbell.net



When I attended Dayton this year and reading the magazines, I see there is now a great interest in solid state amps.

I thought that these amps were...well...not as efficient as tube amps thus not being attractive to hams.  I guess we wanted BIG iron for an amp.

Ameritron has two amps out for quite some time...the 500 and 600 with the 600 now coming with a switching PS.  It seems people who own the 600 watt model like them very much.

Even "E" has the contesters contest amp and it is solid state.  So, what has changed?  Have the SS Amps gotten more efficient?  Higher voltages?  What effects the efficiency of these amps where now there seems to be a market for the Japanese and the Italians.  

Now most radios provide 100 watts output using transistors and the tube finals in rigs have long been gone.  So, is this just a natural evolution of amplifiers or is some new technological breakthrough happened in high powered solid state amplifiers?

Lee - K0WA



In our day and age it seems that Common Sense is in short supply.  If you don't have any Common Sense - get some Common Sense and use it.  If you can't find any Common Sense, ask for help from somebody who has some Common Sense.  Is Common Sense devine?
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Re: OT Solid State Amps

David Cutter
>From a purely manufacturing point of view, it's a lot easier to make a solid
state amplifier, particularly with surface mount parts and flow soldering on
a production line.  Thousands can be made with high accuracy and
repeatability and that alone reduces a major cost centre which is the
manufacturing labour.  Cheaper, more reliable devices and magnetics come
close behind but I think design has to be more clever and equipment in the
design process is more expensive to ensure stability.  However, an rf
transistor is the fastest fuse on 3 legs !  It's a lot easier to let the
smoke out.

David
G3UNA


----- Original Message -----
From: "Lee Buller" <[hidden email]>
To: "Elecraft Reflector" <[hidden email]>
Sent: Friday, June 01, 2007 3:01 PM
Subject: [Elecraft] Solid State Amps


>
>
>
> When I attended Dayton this year and reading the magazines, I see there is
> now a great interest in solid state amps.
>
> I thought that these amps were...well...not as efficient as tube amps thus
> not being attractive to hams.  I guess we wanted BIG iron for an amp.
>
> Ameritron has two amps out for quite some time...the 500 and 600 with the
> 600 now coming with a switching PS.  It seems people who own the 600 watt
> model like them very much.
>
> Even "E" has the contesters contest amp and it is solid state.  So, what
> has changed?  Have the SS Amps gotten more efficient?  Higher voltages?
> What effects the efficiency of these amps where now there seems to be a
> market for the Japanese and the Italians.
>
> Now most radios provide 100 watts output using transistors and the tube
> finals in rigs have long been gone.  So, is this just a natural evolution
> of amplifiers or is some new technological breakthrough happened in high
> powered solid state amplifiers?
>
> Lee - K0WA
>
>
>
> In our day and age it seems that Common Sense is in short supply.  If you
> don't have any Common Sense - get some Common Sense and use it.  If you
> can't find any Common Sense, ask for help from somebody who has some
> Common Sense.  Is Common Sense devine?
> _______________________________________________
> Elecraft mailing list
> Post to: [hidden email]
> You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
> Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.):
> http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
>
> Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm
> Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com 

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Re: Solid State Amps

N2EY
In reply to this post by k0wa@swbell.net
-----Original Message-----
From: Lee Buller <[hidden email]>

>I see there is now a
>great interest in solid state amps.

>I thought that these amps were...well...not as efficient as tube amps
thus not
>being attractive to hams.

>So, what has
>changed?  Have the SS Amps gotten more efficient?

In the case of truly *linear* amplifiers (not Class E or Class D), I
don't think the SS amps have gotten much more efficient than they were
years ago.

What *has* changed is this:

First, the cost of a tube amp keeps increasing because the tubes
themselves and the parts around them are low-quantity items. You can
still build a tube amp for cheap *if* you don't insist on 100% new
parts. Rig manufacturers have to use all-new parts, though. Meanwhile,
the cost of SS keeps going down. I also think the dollars-per-watt cost
of RF transistors has gone down and the watts-per-device has gone up
over the years.

Second, under the old rules of way back when, we hams measured power by
DC input, so efficiency was a big deal, since at the legal limit,
higher efficiency meant more watts to the antenna. But since the rules
changed 20-odd years ago to output, DC-to-RF efficiency takes a back
seat.

The difference between a legal-limit amp that's 66% efficient (2250
watts input gives 1500 watts output) and one that's 50% efficient (3000
watts input gives 1500 watts output) is 750 watts at the DC input. That
seems like a lot, but consider that with SS there are no heaters to
keep warm 100% of the time and that the 750 watts difference is only
needed when actually transmitting.

Third, switching power supplies.

Fourth, things like no fans, no tuning and easy remote/computer control
have become more important to a lot of hams, as well as less expensive
in the overall picture. Consider a K3, KPA1500 combo - won't *that* be
a sweet setup? Yet in inflation-adjusted dollars, it will probably cost
less than an S-line of 40 years ago.

Fifth, in the old days it was common for contesters to have separate
amps for each band so they didn't have to lose time retuning. With an
SS no-tune amp, computer-controlled and integrated into the rig, one
amp can be just about as flexible as the old stack of them.

IOW, it's evolutionary, not revolutionary.

And the evolution has been going on a long time.  I still remember, as
a relatively-new ham, when a QST arrived that showed a legal-limit
all-HF-bands all-solid-state linear amplifier on the cover. Full
homebrewing details, too - you could build one from the article.

Back then I thought "well, we won't see tubes in ham shacks for much
longer, because now even the high-power folks don't need tubes in their
rigs."

That QST issue was for April 1976...

73 de Jim, N2EY

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Re: Solid State Amps

Bill Coleman-2
In reply to this post by k0wa@swbell.net

On Jun 1, 2007, at 10:01 AM, Lee Buller wrote:

> When I attended Dayton this year and reading the magazines, I see  
> there is now a great interest in solid state amps.
>
> I thought that these amps were...well...not as efficient as tube  
> amps thus not being attractive to hams.

I think this is true. It's still cheaper to produce several hundred  
watts with an old tube design than to do so with solid state devices.  
Although that may not continue for long, as certain tubes become  
unobtainium, and solid state devices slowly get cheaper.

> Even "E" has the contesters contest amp and it is solid state.  So,  
> what has changed?  Have the SS Amps gotten more efficient?  Higher  
> voltages?

I think the price point for this type of equipment has shifted upward  
to the point that solid state amplifiers are practical in the market.

> Now most radios provide 100 watts output using transistors and the  
> tube finals in rigs have long been gone.  So, is this just a  
> natural evolution of amplifiers or is some new technological  
> breakthrough happened in high powered solid state amplifiers?

Looks like just the continuing evolution of electronics.

Bill Coleman, AA4LR, PP-ASEL        Mail: [hidden email]
Quote: "Not within a thousand years will man ever fly!"
             -- Wilbur Wright, 1901

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Re: Solid State Amps

michael taylor-3
On 7/12/07, Bill Coleman <[hidden email]> wrote:
>
> > Now most radios provide 100 watts output using transistors and the
> > tube finals in rigs have long been gone.  So, is this just a
> > natural evolution of amplifiers or is some new technological
> > breakthrough happened in high powered solid state amplifiers?
>
> Looks like just the continuing evolution of electronics.

Some of it is an evolution of higher class of amplifier operation,
such as Class-E or F or I guess a hybrid of E and F amplifiers for
higher efficiencies, when suitable for non-linear operation (CW,
some/all? digital modes).

7-MHz, 1.1-kW Demonstration of the New E/F2,odd Switching Amplifier Class
<http://www.its.caltech.edu/%7Emmic/reshpubindex/scott.html>

E. Lau, K. Chu, J. Qin, J. Davis, K. Potter, D. B. Rutledge,
"High-Efficiency Class-E Power Amplifier ," QST May & June, 1997.
<http://www.its.caltech.edu/%7Emmic/reshpubindex/poweramp.htm>

-Michael, VE3TIX
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Re: Solid State Amps

N2EY
In reply to this post by k0wa@swbell.net
In a message dated 7/12/07 11:06:46 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [hidden email]
writes:

> On Jun 1, 2007, at 10:01 AM, Lee Buller wrote:
>
> > I thought that these amps were...well...not as efficient as tube  
> > amps thus not being attractive to hams.
>
> I think this is true. It's still cheaper to produce several hundred  
> watts with an old tube design than to do so with solid state devices.  
> Although that may not continue for long, as certain tubes become  
> unobtainium, and solid state devices slowly get cheaper.

That's part of it. Another part is that power level measurement has changed
from the old power-input measure to the "new" power output measure, so
efficiency doesn't matter as much as it used to.

>
> >  So,  
> > what has changed?  Have the SS Amps gotten more efficient?  
>
> I think the price point for this type of equipment has shifted upward  
> to the point that solid state amplifiers are practical in the market.
>
> There's also the general amateur acceptance of no-tuneup transmitters. While
> it is possible to build tube rigs with no tuneup controls (the CE 100V, 200V
> and 600L did it in the 1950s!), it's arguably easier to do with SS.

The big item, I think, is the cost and availability of the different designs.
Not just the tubes but all the other parts, many of which would have to be
custom made.  The total price of a conventional tube amp and power supply, with
tuning controls and QSK, really starts to climb when you're getting a lot of
parts custom-made.

That situation is complicated by the used-equipment market. If you want to
run, say,  a pair of 3-500Zs, and are willing to do your own tuning, a Drake L4
or Heath SB-220/221 can do the job. Even if you have to put fixup into one and
retube it, such amps are pretty price-competitive to a new pair-of-3-500Zs
amp.

There's also the danger of creating an amp whose tubes become unobtanium. You
can get a really good deal on the Heath SB-630 amp, because its
conduction-cooled tube is very expensive to replace.

Elecraft has built itself on the idea of offering products that are *not*
exactly like everything else on the market, but rather go off in new and exciting
directions. On FD I spent some time with a KX1 - the thing is simply
incredible, but also, there's nothing on the market quite like it.

The Elecraft amps show that trend as well.

73 de Jim, N2EY




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