So much for spending the extra money on "matched" HG transistors. Did you happen to test the hfe of them before installation to see if they were even close on DC gain? Not that this will tell you how they respond at RF, but it would be interesting to see if they are even making any effort to match at DC. If you can't see a difference at DC, start checking the base to emitter capacitance and the collector to emitter capacitance. This will likely reveal why the input and output impedances are different at RF. You can probably do a better job of matching them, than what you paid for.This last batch I bought. Was fixing a straight 6 pill/ transistor amplifier. Set up as 2 device sections. Had to match every capacitor ( all inputs within 1 of, all capacitors across transformers within 2pf, capacitors from collector to ground all matched within 1pf and same for outputs) so no imbalance, all new matched transformers ( yes I had to do 2 or 3 wraps on each and check inductance to make sure right material and all very close, within 0.1uH of each other) All new transistors matched. Still have an imbalance. Even though they should all be the same. I tested each 2 device section individually. Bypassing relay and 3 port splitter/ combiners. Each one did different output, vswr on input all different. The regular HG are garbage. I will never use again. The C’s are better. But not a lot.
My mind is still shocked that no one has cracked open the back of a modern mobile HF rig and started cloning the two transistor RD100HFF1 output stage, as opposed to struggling with these parts that are simply not as advertised. If I still had a 12 volt "customer base", this would have been the very first thing to do. Imagine the advantage you would have, using the latest and most advanced RF output MOSFET's, in the 12 volt class? While not the way to go for base use, until our vehicles start using 48 volt electrical systems, the RD100HFF1 is the only HF, 12 volt, 100 watt, linear RF transistor in production today, that is worth working with.