-----Original Message-----
From: Lee Buller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

I see there is now a
great interest in solid state amps.

I thought that these amps were...well...not as efficient as tube amps
thus not
being attractive to hams.

So, what has
changed?  Have the SS Amps gotten more efficient?

In the case of truly *linear* amplifiers (not Class E or Class D), I don't think the SS amps have gotten much more efficient than they were years ago.

What *has* changed is this:

First, the cost of a tube amp keeps increasing because the tubes themselves and the parts around them are low-quantity items. You can still build a tube amp for cheap *if* you don't insist on 100% new parts. Rig manufacturers have to use all-new parts, though. Meanwhile, the cost of SS keeps going down. I also think the dollars-per-watt cost of RF transistors has gone down and the watts-per-device has gone up over the years.

Second, under the old rules of way back when, we hams measured power by DC input, so efficiency was a big deal, since at the legal limit, higher efficiency meant more watts to the antenna. But since the rules changed 20-odd years ago to output, DC-to-RF efficiency takes a back seat.

The difference between a legal-limit amp that's 66% efficient (2250 watts input gives 1500 watts output) and one that's 50% efficient (3000 watts input gives 1500 watts output) is 750 watts at the DC input. That seems like a lot, but consider that with SS there are no heaters to keep warm 100% of the time and that the 750 watts difference is only needed when actually transmitting.

Third, switching power supplies.

Fourth, things like no fans, no tuning and easy remote/computer control have become more important to a lot of hams, as well as less expensive in the overall picture. Consider a K3, KPA1500 combo - won't *that* be a sweet setup? Yet in inflation-adjusted dollars, it will probably cost less than an S-line of 40 years ago.

Fifth, in the old days it was common for contesters to have separate amps for each band so they didn't have to lose time retuning. With an SS no-tune amp, computer-controlled and integrated into the rig, one amp can be just about as flexible as the old stack of them.

IOW, it's evolutionary, not revolutionary.

And the evolution has been going on a long time. I still remember, as a relatively-new ham, when a QST arrived that showed a legal-limit all-HF-bands all-solid-state linear amplifier on the cover. Full homebrewing details, too - you could build one from the article.

Back then I thought "well, we won't see tubes in ham shacks for much longer, because now even the high-power folks don't need tubes in their rigs."

That QST issue was for April 1976...

73 de Jim, N2EY

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