Cheers. Did they ever mention why they used 10awg cord?
I currently extended the existing 10 gauge via soldering and heatshrink to 2 feet of regular stranded 8 awg.
I noticed you also upgraded the internal power cables also. My amp is currently set to pep at 400W tops . the current draw doesnt seem high either last i recall was about upper 20s to 30 amps at 13.9V.
Can you please explain the TS modulation meter and what it means? All i know is that its not good for the needle to hit past 10. Cheers
Actually, 10 gauge wire is adequate for the amplifier, providing you not using more than 10 feet of wire. It is the voltage drop over the length that is the culprit when the wire is under load. What you did will be just fine.
I upgraded the wire all the way to the boards to alleviate any voltage drop and still have full current and voltage capabilities.
A Texas Star DX500V under full output will pull up to 62 ~ 65 amps with 600 plus watts output. I have measured this many times. The full 8 gauge wire upgrade actually will increase the power output capability of the 500V.......Although we do not run our amplifiers at full output normally. I only use Toshiba 2SC2879 transistors. The DEI's will not take that kind of use for very long.
The "meter" is for a relative reading only. It is only telling you that the amplifier is putting out power, not how much power. I have one 500V that only shows a little over half meter reading when the amp is putting out over 500 watts of power. It all depends what resistor is in the circuit that drives the meter. Schematic calls for a 27K ohm. Some of the newer 500's have a 20K ohm and will let the meter swing over more.
Best case of operation is to have a quality VSWR / POWER meter after the amplifier and before the antenna. And also before an antenna tuner rated to handle at least 1K watts.
The power output is also relative to the power input.....(coming out of the radio).
I set my Stryker SR955HP at a 3~4 watt AM carrier dead key on my watt meter. That generally dead keys the 500V at around 200 watts. Then I just drive the Texas Star 500V with the modulation swing from there, on AM and SSB.
And yes, the 955HP wil be swinging up to 60 or 70 watts or so into the TS 500. But it will be okay. I have been using two 500V's this way for over 2 years and all is okay. And I do have the fan kits installed as I have mentioned in other posts.
I never use the variable as it is a weak link. On one ampilfier, I took the variable pot out and installed a 15 ohm 5 watt resistor in it's place. Now when the "Green" variable button is pressed in, it turns the amplifier down to approximately 1/2 power output. It essentially now has a "Hi" mode and a "Low" mode. This is what my friend wanted, a high and a low, no variable.
I apologize for being long winded. Hope all this helps.