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Re: Max anode voltage?
Original poster: Ed Phillips <evp@xxxxxxxxxxx>
I would like to believe I know what I am doing though I have not designed a
high power tube oscillator before.
I do not understand the fine detail on how the grid leak works or how to
handle the variable load presented by the tank and secondary under the
transient conditions of pulsed operation."
Your problem is not only one of designing a high power oscillator
but designing of one feeding a resonant and variable load. Designing
an oscillator for a resistive load isn't much different from
designing a power amplifier for the same power level except that you
have to figure out the feedback to get the required grid
drive. Knowing the operating grid bias and grid current (part of the
amplifier design) you can then choose the self-bias resistor (grid
leak). The problem of course is getting the oscillator to start
correctly so that the tube doesn't fry its little self due to lack of
excitation with resultant grid drive.
When it comes to trying to drive a resonant load like a
TC, and particularly one where the load resistance and reactance both
vary with output power and with time (streamer growth) things get a
lot trickier. I know a fellow who was designed in designing a power
oscillator for a cyclotron which UCLA built some time back and they
had a devil of a time getting the thing to work because of the many
possible modes of oscillation it had and of the difficulty of getting
it to start in the correct one. I'm not sure they ever really
succeeded. Somewhere I have a reprint of a paper they wrote but
don't know where it is.
Ed