If you take your example of 250 watts input power at 18 volts and 13.9 amps with 70% efficiency, I come up with 175 watts into the load and 75 watts of collector dissipation. Up the drive until the collector draws 25 amps and you have 450 watts input, 135 dissipation and 315 watts output. That is only 24 watts more output then I've ever seen from the device. The transistor was designed with enough collector dissipation so that it would not be the weak link in the chain. Going past 20 volts or 25 amps is what kills this part. This is what prevents you from ever reaching the output power that would be obtained at the 250 watt collector dissipation.
I read your posts in the other tread about building combining the two amps and using it on the other HF bands. Before you go through the work of doing that, I would test a single amplifier on each of the lower bands you intend to operate on to make sure it runs stable first. Even passing this test is not a 100% guarantee it will still be stable after you combine two but it's a great start. Keep the coax going to your combiners as short as possible and the same length.
At 94 watts each transistor they will be running comfortably and with the correct mic gain setting the IMD shouldn't be too bad. It is biased but as you probably know it's not the best bias circuit or amplifier for HF. If one amp works good I'd almost be tempted to leave it at that rather then come up with twice the DC amps to feed a pair and gain a half an "S" unit. There is also the chance of a self oscillation on some frequency that could wipe out transistors instantly too.
Oh yeah, the amps will be tested individually before continuing. I was thinking of taking them into work and doing a freq sweep with 5 watts output and doing both an input VSWR plot and gain plot per based on freq.
250 x.7 = 175 watts output 75 dissipation. Same setup but driven till 25 amps is reached you get 450 watts input 315 output and 135 watts disipation ok got it, Dont know what I screwed up when doin my math prior............oh wait hahaha never mind, i divide by 70 instead of multiplying by .7 hahahaha Wow, i need a vacation.
But what im still pondering is, the resistance at the devices output. Im sure the output transformer has at least 2 ohms of resistance, (I may be wrong). Take that into consideration and at 18v drawing 9 amps, the device would only then be producing 162 watts. This is where I am getting hung up. This is what the basis of my argument was.
Is this resistance what is accounted for already in the efficiency rating? The transformers secondary winding is what separates the transistor from the 52 ohm output correct?