Yes you can use snap on beads right outside the amp.
It just helps stop RF from flowing back up the power wires.
73
Jeff
It just helps stop RF from flowing back up the power wires.
73
Jeff
Thanks for the link. It looks like this one should work as long as I can mount it on the cable just outside the case. It has an ID of 0.505 inch and the OD of the 6 AWG cable I am using is 0.4 inch.its more than likely a type 43 ferrite bead. you can get them in different sizes and different inner diameters. they are called by different names but are bassically the same thing ferrite bead, ferrite ring, ferrite core. just one of many suppliers for an example. https://www.kf7p.com/KF7P/Ferrite_chokes.html
Sorry to pester you with yet another question but... In general, does a slip-on ferrite bead work better than a clamp-on one of the same dimensions? I'm thinking of any stray RF weasels that try to sneak up the slot where the two halves join.Yes you can use snap on beads right outside the amp.
It just helps stop RF from flowing back up the power wires.
73
Jeff
Because I caught a bit of grief here a few months ago when I mentioned extending the #8 wires and it was suggested I should do it properly and completely replace the #8 wire with #6 wire. Plus it's another excuse to tinker/learn.Instead of screwing around soldering the #6 wire to the board, why not just butt-join the #6 to the #8?
Or just replace it with 8awgBecause I caught a bit of grief here a few months ago when I mentioned extending the #8 wires and it was suggested I should do it properly and completely replace the #8 wire with #6 wire. Plus it's another excuse to tinker/learn.
It'll be better once the weather warms up and I can get back to mucking about on my bike and car projects in the workshop.
Agreed. I tried it out and my 60 watt soldering iron is too wimpy to get enough heat into the 6 AWG wire to make a solid joint so I will stick with 8 AWG. I know I have a Weller 200/300 watt soldering gun packed away somewhere but it's been at least 5 years since I last saw it. I will find it when I am not looking for it.Or just replace it with 8awg
The margins on amplifiers, especially cb amplifiers, especially DC boxes, are slim on all sides. Slim for the builder, slim for the retailer.I thought the same thing the first time I looked inside one and was able to study it. The Manhattan style build puts function over form and is fairly easy to duplicate. It amazes me that there are so many builders of these devices for the grey market. Basic supply and demand I guess, I might start a small business doing this when I retire.
wrong! mounting a sleeve-bearing fan VERTICALLY will reduce its lifespan significantly due to the uneven load on the upper portion of the bearing. These fans are best used in a horizontal application.Another cheap Evercool sleeve bearing fan that should not be mounted horizontally. I have seen the same fan on Fatboy amps too.
Every HG transistor I tested here was not anything like the device it was supposed to be a copy of. I won't use them here.Attached are the datasheets for the Toshiba 2SC2879 and the HG2SC2879. As you can see by comparing the 2 datasheets, HG's sheet is almost a carbon copy of the Toshiba as far as Maximum ratings and Electrical characteristics. There is additional data on the Toshiba datasheet("Input power") that is not "copied" onto the HG datasheet. Look at the charts on page 2 of the Toshiba datasheet.
Granted the HG datasheet is not for the HG2SC2879C but the lack of complete information makes me suspect.
73
David
I just don't use sleeve bearing fans in anything.wrong! mounting a sleeve-bearing fan VERTICALLY will reduce its lifespan significantly due to the uneven load on the upper portion of the bearing. These fans are best used in a horizontal application.
Self oscillation.I may have spoken too soon with the Lincoln II+. At lunchtime I was using it on SSB with the amp on high and when I un-keyed the mic, it did the same thing as the Anytone was doing i.e. nearly pegged the S-meter and only stopped doing it when I turned the amp off. This radio only puts out about 28 watts PEP so it's not even capable of exceeding the amps limits. I ask Carl's if I can send the amp in to them to get it checked over.
I changed my power wires to #4 cable. So I to ditch the small bead also. I prefer to have a choke with a loop. So I have a ton of these large 43 mix beads. I was able to get 2 pass thru my bead on the outside the of cabinet. 31 mix would be better but I do not have any. I plan on buying some from Palomar Engineers.I am in the process of replacing the much-too-short 8 awg power cables on my 200HDC with six foot long 6 awg cables. The outer diameter of the new 6 awg positive cable is 10mm and this is too large to fit inside the ring that the current 8 awg wire goes through right before where it is soldered onto a bar. I assume this ring is important so I want to replace it with the right one that fits this larger OD cable.
Any chance any of you folks know what I should use here?
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