why am I not getting full Modulation swing from a low Carrier?
I don't believe so.. I think the radio is doing what is supposed to do, as you increase the carrier the peak output will come up with the carrier, as long as the limiter/AMC is intact, that is the "brick wall" you are seeing, the AMC is attempting to reign in the radio so it doesn't over-modulate and destroy the adjacent channels with splatter.the meter swings up and seems like it hits a wall, doubled checked everything is right all parts are exactly what was called for ,the little cap on soldered side removed ,872 regulator new, other 2 small 1869 regs. new, is it just inferior mosfets? irf520n
the plans call for R249 removed so wouldn't that make it swing somewhat? I even tried the NPC volting and no difference still the same just like it swings up fast then hits a wall and stops, the bias is set @ 3.6 driver, 3.5 finalsI don't want to be offensive so please don't be offended.. but...
In a properly configured radio you aren't supposed to see full swing output from 1-2 Watts, that is a separate modification and not one I recommend unless you have a lot of time on your hands and an oscilloscope.
"But, LeapFrog, it's as easy as adding a diode and changing a resistor" Yeah it sounds real easy in theory, but putting it into practice is a whole 'nother story.
Not too many CB Techs that I've seen online do that mod, and even fewer get it to be somewhat clean when it's done.
Just my 2 Cents.
I can tell you from my experience with some EKL modifications, the bias voltage was low, so I had to make a custom "companion component" or use a dedicated bias voltage rail to get it where I wanted. Then the power came up.
I've never performed an EKL mosfet conversion on a Galaxy EPT3600xx, so I couldn't tell you if the bias is adjustable after the mod, or if it is fixed.
But yeah if you have proper bias at the gate of the Fet, and it isn't doing what you want then it sounds like you are asking about a "swing mod".
Edit: Just to add, the first "export radio" I ever owned was a Galaxy 66v and it had a 1n4001 rectifier diode for the "swing mod", I splattered into my TV so hard, the flat screen was giving me talk-back.
After I removed the non-factory stuff, the radio no longer interfered with my TV.
That's interesting because I don't see R249 mentioned anywhere in the EKL Fet papers.
Try this on your test bench, of course use a dummy load:
re-install R249 (Limiter)
And instead add a 1N4148 diode in series @ R238, banded end towards PC board (left side if I remember correctly).
See what that does for the "swing".
Again i'm not advocating this mod, but you want something to try, then go ahead.
You could also play with the value of R238, increasing it.
Or even install a 1N4148 and 100 Ohm (play with the value try 220 Ohm)
in series with each other placed in parallel at C-189 (I forget which way they go in).
I don't recommend this mod, but you asked..
I don't know but to me 3.5 Volts seems a little low, i'm not largely into SSB radios, & I don't own any that have a MosFet driver...
Have you performed a dual tone linearity test for SSB?
If your RF section is under-biased, I don't suspect SSB will look correct on the 'scope.
The technician cannot do anything about it. The resulting signal I discussed occurs inside the mixer, and the technician can't take the integrated circuit apart. As I said in the video, the resulting signal occurs at a frequency that is in the designed pass band of the radio. The radio amplifies it because it occurs in the same frequency range it was designed for. The technician could possible attenuate the effect a little by retuning the radio so that it amplifies poorly in the 10M band, but it would still be there a bit. If that is what the technician wants to do, then they need to at least know about the problem and that is where this video comes in
The only good thing about this is that the offending signal is down 50 dB relative to the 27 MHz carrier, or at least it is on the one I measured. If no amplifier is used to make this unwanted signal worse, it is relatively a minor signal.