"With careful tuning of the radios output section, and a 1969, THIS is the way to get 75 PEP out of a 29."
Can you really hit 75 watts on a positive modulation peak with a single 2SC1969? (Disclaimer: I don't know the actual specs for a 1969 so I could easily be talking out of my butt, but I was under the impression that since it was originally chosen for standard CB radios designed for SSB operation with 12 watts PEP, the upper limit wasn't that high.)
Obviously, negative peak compression is meant to deal with the case where you have more headroom available for positive peaks than for negative ones (by rounding out the negative peaks instead of letting them turn square when they hit the 0 volt line), but there does come a point where you run out of positive headroom too (presumably when you drive the positive peaks beyond the supply voltage). I thought for sure that a single 2SC1969 would end up clipping its positive peaks well before you hit 75 watts.
I guess a better question would be: even if you can do that, will you still be able to maintain linear operation? Granted, you're introducing some distortion by doing NPC in the first place (you're avoiding the IMD effects of having the waveform flatten out, but still: the audio waveform leaving the radio won't look like the one that went in -- technically that means distortion), but I would think that if the RF amplifier stages don't retain linear operation across the whole output range, you're going to induce some additional distortion near the tops of the positive peaks.
-Bill
Can you really hit 75 watts on a positive modulation peak with a single 2SC1969? (Disclaimer: I don't know the actual specs for a 1969 so I could easily be talking out of my butt, but I was under the impression that since it was originally chosen for standard CB radios designed for SSB operation with 12 watts PEP, the upper limit wasn't that high.)
Obviously, negative peak compression is meant to deal with the case where you have more headroom available for positive peaks than for negative ones (by rounding out the negative peaks instead of letting them turn square when they hit the 0 volt line), but there does come a point where you run out of positive headroom too (presumably when you drive the positive peaks beyond the supply voltage). I thought for sure that a single 2SC1969 would end up clipping its positive peaks well before you hit 75 watts.
I guess a better question would be: even if you can do that, will you still be able to maintain linear operation? Granted, you're introducing some distortion by doing NPC in the first place (you're avoiding the IMD effects of having the waveform flatten out, but still: the audio waveform leaving the radio won't look like the one that went in -- technically that means distortion), but I would think that if the RF amplifier stages don't retain linear operation across the whole output range, you're going to induce some additional distortion near the tops of the positive peaks.
-Bill