Well it did exactly what Cheech said, as I expected. With the radio untouched and the amp on I was pinched up. On low I was pinched and putting out 83 watts with absolutely no swing. On high I was pinched even worst and putting out 122 watts with no swing. I turned the amp off and ran bare radio with no problems. I figured that this amp was a limited production made behind closed doors at someone’s shop for a little extra cash (J&S CB Radios in Cali.). With that said I believe that it was a simple design with no extra care given to the drive circuit (no "padding”). Remember this is not a high end amp like a TS or Palomar. After reading the Cobra service manual again I am leading to believe that LT1 is used to adjust power. The VCO goes to a buffer amp which feeds a tuning circuit (LT1) that supplies the pre driver amp, RF driver amp, and the final. By changing the buffer amp tuning circuit you will change the radios overall output. Modulation is fed in at the RF driver and final circuits, after the buffer amp tuning circuit (LT1).
"the only method for re-shaping the peak-to-carrier output in the Cobra 19DX is to construct an RC shaping circuit and substitute it for the negative peak clipping rectifier in the transformer output that feeds the collectors of the driver and final stages simultaneously."
The buffer amp tuning circuit is basically doing the same thing but off the VCO.
I know for sure the amp likes low power drive and I think I'll hook up the meter and tune the LT1.
"the only method for re-shaping the peak-to-carrier output in the Cobra 19DX is to construct an RC shaping circuit and substitute it for the negative peak clipping rectifier in the transformer output that feeds the collectors of the driver and final stages simultaneously."
The buffer amp tuning circuit is basically doing the same thing but off the VCO.
I know for sure the amp likes low power drive and I think I'll hook up the meter and tune the LT1.