Simple, getting 130 watts out of 2 of these switching fets is madness, they are made for 65 watts dissipating power at 25 C and that degrades every 1 C with 0.5 watt, that goes for the chip structure inside the fet, that has to be transfered to the hot tab on the fet then through an isolator to a heatsink.
that is 1 x 20 degrees difference for every transition before the heat from the chip reaches the heatsink.
That amp is running literarely on it's toes, and only run for very short times for a reason, or else smoke would come out.
There is a reason CB uses cheap solutions sold as amateur radio or not.
And there is a reason real ham radios have a totally different approach to making P.A.s build to last and spectral purity, hence cost more.
I rather have an decent designed P.A. with real HF fets, with a lot of headroom made for continuous use on the set power output like the 991 A or FT2000-D has with 4 Fets.
that is 1 x 20 degrees difference for every transition before the heat from the chip reaches the heatsink.
That amp is running literarely on it's toes, and only run for very short times for a reason, or else smoke would come out.
There is a reason CB uses cheap solutions sold as amateur radio or not.
And there is a reason real ham radios have a totally different approach to making P.A.s build to last and spectral purity, hence cost more.
I rather have an decent designed P.A. with real HF fets, with a lot of headroom made for continuous use on the set power output like the 991 A or FT2000-D has with 4 Fets.