100% modulation should never swing either direction. It should stay steady on an average power RF meter.
Positive or negative shift is also known as carrier shift when using old terminology and is acceptable to a point in the positive direction up to 125%+ modulation before it becomes reduced carrier modulation which is what some of you seem to want with these swing kits.
When it swings in the opposite direction that is almost always a sign of a weak power supply or overdriving the amplifier, bad drain capacitors on the PA stage if naturally using a piss weak supply, or issues in the loading of the antenna system.
Those would be the first places I would look in order.
Negative swing is almost always caused by a power supply feeding an RF linear that just can not handle peaks of full modulation for extended periods OR is the cause of overdriving an amplifier final where it just can not support the full positive peaks.
This is not always a downfall though as voice peaks are more rare than the peaks of a sine wave tone input which is why some old AM rigs got away with tiny power supplies but still put out most of the power. It is only when you run a clean sine wave into a transmitter that you find out real quick if it was built for full duty service or short peaks of vocal loudness
Sorry if I am off discussion but I think this was on point?
Positive or negative shift is also known as carrier shift when using old terminology and is acceptable to a point in the positive direction up to 125%+ modulation before it becomes reduced carrier modulation which is what some of you seem to want with these swing kits.
When it swings in the opposite direction that is almost always a sign of a weak power supply or overdriving the amplifier, bad drain capacitors on the PA stage if naturally using a piss weak supply, or issues in the loading of the antenna system.
Those would be the first places I would look in order.
Negative swing is almost always caused by a power supply feeding an RF linear that just can not handle peaks of full modulation for extended periods OR is the cause of overdriving an amplifier final where it just can not support the full positive peaks.
This is not always a downfall though as voice peaks are more rare than the peaks of a sine wave tone input which is why some old AM rigs got away with tiny power supplies but still put out most of the power. It is only when you run a clean sine wave into a transmitter that you find out real quick if it was built for full duty service or short peaks of vocal loudness
Sorry if I am off discussion but I think this was on point?