I’m sure it has a lot to do with input also. I don’t think 25 W on sideband would hurt this amp at all.. A.m. that’s a different story.It appears I can jump pins 2&3 to get full power w/ ssb delay active. Will be trying that. Thanks for the help.
Thanks for that. We will see what happens with various input level and a two-tone signal. I figured there had to be something to that. It doesn’t make any sense, whatsoever, to make the switch a “dual-purpose” switch unless they have good reason.Be sure and listen to it on another radio before and after.
The designer combined those two functions on the SSB button because sideband doesn't tolerate overdriving the transistors as well as AM mode does.
If you're okay with how it sounds, that's the opinion that matters, right? The drive gets reduced by that button to reduce flattopping. The peaks of your SSB RF envelope get clipped with full drive. The resistor reduces this effect by reducing drive level.
And a glance at this with a 'scope would confirm my suspicion, that peaks are getting flattened with the a jumper on that resistor.
73
Lol yeah. Gosh that dual mosfet thing was like a dozen years ago I think TS must have made that change when they stuck that little rocker switch on the back for SSB.
It looks like now it just turns on the delay.
The older ones did not work that way.
They have made changes before that just appear and you don't know untill the lid is pulled.
I could not believe it when I opened a 667 and found 2 mosfets for a 2290, That was a eye opener
73
Jeff
Am signal didn’t look too bad when the AM (attenuation) button was pressed. Only 3w carrier and 9w pep input. Slightly under modulated. I’d recommend 2.5w carrier and 10w pep. Very efficient amp.Be sure and listen to it on another radio before and after.
The designer combined those two functions on the SSB button because sideband doesn't tolerate overdriving the transistors as well as AM mode does.
If you're okay with how it sounds, that's the opinion that matters, right? The drive gets reduced by that button to reduce flattopping. The peaks of your SSB RF envelope get clipped with full drive. The resistor reduces this effect by reducing drive level.
And a glance at this with a 'scope would confirm my suspicion, that peaks are getting flattened with the a jumper on that resistor.
73