In fact, they DID make high power non-tube amps. They used the standard amps, divided the drive, then combined the output of each amp to get the higher power.
Joe M. Joe Burkleo wrote: > Also as Nate said, GE did not make a high power solid state amp. The > Mastr II high power stations that I referred to use a normal Mastr II > solid state PA to drive a tube amplifier to acheive the 225-250 Watts > on UHF or 375 Watts on VHF. > > If you are not familiar with high power tube transmitters and working > with high voltages, stay away from these. They are not for the faint > of heart, and the voltages present can be quite deadly. > > Joe - WA7JAW > > --- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, "Joe Burkleo" > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> You might try contacting Larry K7LJ. He posts on here occasionally and >> I know he had a couple of these the last time I talked to him, but >> that was a couple months ago. >> >> They are more like 350 Watts. >> >> Joe >> >> --- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, "kb4ptj" <kb4ptj@> wrote: >>> hi i am looking for ge uhf solid state high power 88 splyt 200watts >>> kb4ptj@ >>> > > > > ------------------------------------ > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > >