I know that this is kinda old but I just now saw it!
NPC does NOT stand for Negative Peak Clipping<-------That is the last thing that youu want. It is NP Compression! Huge Difference.
BTW, the mod that is shown at the beginning of this thread is for a 148 Cobra and yes it was Bill Eitner's version but almost identical to my version. There is no similarity between this mod and the one done with the diode/resistor on the 3600XXX boards.
Quote:
"SS8541,,,,,,i think the npc/rc is trash, even though it is based on an old a.m. engineering(positive carrier shift) and ham(negative cycle compression) form of a.m. modulation. for one, it makes no sense to remove the limiter. the purpose of this modification is to increase positive modulation while keeping a clean signal(neg. peaks at 100% or less). removing the limiter completely voids the whole point of the mod. and volting the finals is also a wasted step. you may get another 5w that no one will ever see, while at the same time stressing the final/finals."
I find it hard to believe that there are so many techs that want to talk bad about something that they don't even have a clue about.
You could not possibly make a statement that could be more wrong than the paragraph quoted above. It is absolutely essential that the limiter be disabled!!!
It causes NO TRASH OF ANY TYPE!
I have explained numerous times on this forum and CBTRICKS that the limiter is removed for this mod--"not to void the Whole point of the mod", but because the NPC circuit takes the place of the limiter and does a better job. The job that the limiter does before the NPC-RC is being accomplished by the NPC circuit and the limiter is no longer needed because it will cause the NPC to be of no consequence--It HAS to be removed for the NPC to functuion properly.
Your so-called "volting the finals" (which it is NOT) is NOT done to get more power or to raise the voltage on the finals--It is done to save the modulation transistor from burning up because of the extra work load that it has put on it with ANY modulation boosting modification. As a side-effect, the finals get extra voltage which is FINE AND DANDY! The finals could take another 4 or 5 volts without hurting them.
If the radio is an SSB unit, the voltage on the finals during SSB transmission is the full voltage right off of the power plug--Same transistors--Same peak audio--NO HARM done to the finals because of voltage!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
Anyone that believes that the raised voltage will damage the finals needs to study the topic of power dissipation. Then get the spec sheet of the final transistor and see what the power dissipation rating of that transistor is.
The SAME TRANSISTOR seems to have no problem when you substitute it for the 2078 in a Cobra 29 WHICH HAS THE FULL VOLTAGE ON THE FINAL! Wonder why? The 29 uses a transformer for modulation which should be much more dangerous to the final with high voltage than the transistorized modulation.
If you will notice, there has been a lot more of the "main Line" techs on the forums that are NOW agreeing with me on this subject.