Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#18
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
The nitrogen was for the transmission line.
Regards Gary On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 22:03:22 -0500, "Doug Dotson" wrote: Thanks for the clarification Larry. I was pretty sure that modern transmitter technology wasn't something I had in a dream. I was up in Fairbanks a couple years ago and I suspect that keeping the finals cool isn't much of a problem there ![]() the engineer for a UHF station back in the late 50's. He told stories of having to run out and get bottles of Nitrogen to keep the finals going. Life is much simpler now. Doug, k3qt s/v Callista "Larry W4CSC" wrote in message ... Er, ah, Bruce? There are no "finals" any more. The 50KW transmitter is just a switching power supply from Harris.....take a look at: http://www.geocities.com/aaron_white/inside.html It's all done by that big board switching the modules on and off at the audio rate, in sequence. See those two little powertab transistors on the copper heat sink? THOSE ARE THE FINALS! If a module fails, the computer simply bypasses it and uses another module (there are spares) until someone shows up at the transmitter to look for the failure lights. They don't even shut down the transmitter to swap them out, any more. Hot swaps just like a computer...(c; The two PC boards on the door are the "modulator", the drivers for the modules creating the RF. It's so efficient it's cooled with small FANS! To produce a 50,000 watt carrier, it requires only 55,000 watts of AC power from the power company, not the 120KW we were accustomed to. No massive filament power, no blood-red plates being cooled with water, no cooling pond. The RF modules (there are 144 of them in a Harris DX-50, 50KW transmitter) look like: http://www.geocities.com/aaron_white/dxmod.html Some are 100W, 500W, 1KW, 2KW. The audio is simply converted into how many modules run at this instant in time. The modules, themselves are switching on and off at the carrier rate. The output filter takes out the 3rd harmonic caused by the square wave switching up. Nothing analog to make heat. It's a RF synthesized sinewave just like your boat inverter. You'll be glad to know from the Harris out it's still RF....(c; Here's the ATU at WFAN: http://www.geocities.com/aaron_white/atu1.html 75KW dummy load: http://www.geocities.com/aaron_white/load.html 50KW isn't what it used to be...(sigh). http://www.geocities.com/aaron_white/maintx.html The modulator and final are inside the right doors. The other end is the power supply. Kinda a non-event unless the RF output flashes over, which my friends in broadcasting says is also a non-event for the digital transmitter. It simply clears it, resets and tries again. If it continues to flash over, the transmitter comes up in low power (10KW) until the techies show up..... The computer that operates the transmitter is in that rack to the left of the Harris at WFAN. The whole thing is in a corner of the transmitter shack which is mostly taken up by the darkened old 50KW monster you're thinking about. Tom Ray, Director of Engineering over at WOR in NYC, sent me some cool pictures of their IBOC Digital AM experiments on their Harris DX-50. If you listen to WOR or WLW's IBOC on a regular AM radio you hear a faint hissing sound that is the digital subcarriers. The two stations, 10 Khz apart, are experimenting with interference caused by the IBOC carriers. Most interesting.....AM that sounds like mono-FM but at great distances. On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 21:20:46 GMT, Bruce in Alaska wrote: In article , "Doug Dotson" wrote: and dispatches licensed techs Nope Doug, no License Required anymore. Knowledgable Tech's recomeended but not even required. That's why I got out of the Broadcast Business 35 years ago. To many Carneigie, and Elkins, First Phone's showing up, and getting OTJ Training on my license as Chief Engineer. There's no such thing as an Automated 50,000 Watt AM Transmitter. When those puppy's decide to melt down, they do it in a hurry, and usually with lots of sparks and steam from the liquid cooling systems. Usually the finals are pulled at 50% of rated time, but nowdays with skimpy maintaince money, owners are pushing that out to 80% and catastophic failure is happen a lot more often. Reminds me of a very cold January Night when KRAB-FM's antenna took a hell of a wet snow load, and unbalanced the two 5Kw finals explosivly. I came around the corner and the DJ on duty was out in the street with a bunch of steaming holes in the snow where hot final Parts had melted down through the snow. Took the consulting engineer and I, 8 hours to rebuild the final cage (Lots of plumbing parts) and get it back on the air. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ Larry W4CSC No, no, Scotty! I said, "Beam me a wrench.", not a WENCH! Kirk Out..... |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Notes on short SSB antennas, for Larry | Cruising | |||
fa: HYGAIN # 780 FIBERGLASS ANTENNAS for CB/VHF, NEW> Pics>$20 | Electronics | |||
Morad Antennas was weatherfax ANTENNA | Electronics |