Just about every Icom HF radio PA uses them.Wow! 30 MHz and six legs. New one on me.
73
Just about every Icom HF radio PA uses them.Wow! 30 MHz and six legs. New one on me.
73
R10/R11 and R13/R12 provide negative feedback.Negative feedback is all about reducing gain. Maybe that will tame a transistor that has ten times too much gain? Never had to try.
Not so much inapropriate as unstable. An amplifier circuit appropriate for a 30 MHz transistor may present an oscillator circuit for a part meant to run at a frequency ten or twenty times higher.too high an ft would make them inappropriate
That's what bypass caps are for. I see several of them in the circuit. They need to be physically close to the high ft transistor.Not so much inapropriate as unstable. An amplifier circuit appropriate for a 30 MHz transistor may present an oscillator circuit for a part meant to run at a frequency ten or twenty times higher.
Then build it. I wish you luck!That's what bypass caps are for. I see several of them in the circuit. They need to be physically close to the high ft transistor.
I'd rather have too much ft than too little!
As an RF Engineer, I've done dozens of such designs.Then build it. I wish you luck!
Rule of thumb here, is fT x 2 of design frequency.As an RF Engineer, I've done dozens of such designs.
This one might work a bit better with high ft transistors with some PCB layout tweaks, but I see nothing obviously wrong with it.
That's only possible for a gain of two or less. Unless you want an attenuator!Rule of thumb here, is fT x 2 of design frequency.
Oh yea. Like I really need one more project…The amp is $100. Buy one and make it work, then share your mods and results.
But with the given feedback resistors, it's running at unity gain.Not so much inapropriate as unstable. An amplifier circuit appropriate for a 30 MHz transistor may present an oscillator circuit for a part meant to run at a frequency ten or twenty times higher.
Talk is cheap.That's only possible for a gain of two or less. Unless you want an attenuator!
fT is defined as the point of unity gain in a gaussian (6db/octave) roll-off.
Oh yea. Like I really need one more project…![]()