neazoi
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Efficiency, linearity, and reliability of the circuit get worse paralleling transistors, instead using only one transistor chosen to meet the specifications.
To get a compromise in performance there is an empirical limit how many transistors you can place in parallel for an amplifier, and usually this limit is 2 for BJTs and no more than 4 for MOSFETs.
To bias the amplifier into class A, put a resistor in series with the choke that is earthing the bases ,after the input capacitor. feed some current into the top end of the choke, say .6- .8mA, which if you get it from your +12 V means a 18 - 13K resistor. This should provide a little forward bias. You could use a 10K and a 10 K pot in series and set the pot to give a combined PA current of say, 100mA. This gives a total dissipation of .1 X 12 = 1.2W or 120 mW per transistor, depending on its Hfe and the emitter resistor.
Frank
I know in push pull transistors must be matched and the emitter tesistors can help if these are not closely matched. But I did not know that the same applies in single ended amplifiers.Paralleling the transistors is a very common technique in RFIC Power Amplifiers because the transistors are-almost- identical on the silicon.But it's pretty difficult to catch the same matching with discrete transistors due to higher manufacturing tolerances.It may work if it is well matched but if the "co-operation" can not be maintaned, it will be worse than a single equivalent.
I read somewhere that a power Mosfet has thousands of tiny ones in parallel inside.
An RF amplifier frequently has its output tuned then its transistor can be efficiently pulsed with class-C but its output still has a sinewave with low harmonics.
The thing about power mosfets you mentioned is very interesting.
No, I refer to class-A broadband amplifiers without output filters to rebuild the sinewave. Is the matching required in that case?
Matching is always necessary.You should do "Power Matching" for high powers because conjugate matching is slightly different than power matching.
How to do that ?? Load Pull technique but it's almost impossible for radio amateurs due to its cost.
But you can still find something to do this.If you can find a sliding tuner for that band of interest, you may find the optimum load impdance.Then you should design a matching circuit that matches this impedance to antenna impedance.
A class-A transistor produces severe distortion (many harmonics) when its output level is fairly high (but not clipping) and its voltage gain is high.
Usually a lot of negative feedback is added to reduce the gain and reduce the distortion.
Transistor matching is another concern.If you're able, find the same lot numbered transistors as close as possible..I think you refer to impedance matching. I do not refer to impedance matching, but to transistors matching, when they are used in parallel in a class-A RF amplifier (on HF), like the circuit in my first post. This circuit is not a class-A one but when this is biased to class-A using some base resistors as mentioned earlier.
Google for wilkinson power amplifier or power divider/combiner power amplifier. For example:
**broken link removed**
The datasheet for the PN2222 shows that its minimum current gain at 100MHz is only 2.5 which is not much better than a piece of wire. At 25-30MHz it also has poor performance because it is not an RF transistor.I have no idea if this would wirk satisfactorily at 25-30MHz though using pn2222
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