Here's what we use for 11-meter AM hot-rod operators.
The coil is #14 copper, three turns wound on a half-inch diamter. One 100-ohm 5-Watt carbon-film resistor inside, and another one in parallel alongside it. The long "tail" on each is to make it flexible enough to remove and install tubes without damaging the solder lug at the top of the plate choke.
Looks crude, but driving the amplifier hard produces a lot of harmonic energy. The parasitic choke will trap enough of this harmonic energy to overheat and cause the original 2-Watt part to fail, usually with a crack down the middle.
And if your main interest is sideband, you won't be driving the SB-220 hard enough for this solution to make sense.
But the nichrome suppressors will probably overheat if you use the SB-220 as an AM hot rod.
73
The coil is #14 copper, three turns wound on a half-inch diamter. One 100-ohm 5-Watt carbon-film resistor inside, and another one in parallel alongside it. The long "tail" on each is to make it flexible enough to remove and install tubes without damaging the solder lug at the top of the plate choke.
Looks crude, but driving the amplifier hard produces a lot of harmonic energy. The parasitic choke will trap enough of this harmonic energy to overheat and cause the original 2-Watt part to fail, usually with a crack down the middle.
And if your main interest is sideband, you won't be driving the SB-220 hard enough for this solution to make sense.
But the nichrome suppressors will probably overheat if you use the SB-220 as an AM hot rod.
73