Apologies if these questions have already been answered, in which case
perhaps someone could refer me to where. I have looked at the manual and
searched back on the reflector without success.
73 to all
Geoff
G3UCK
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The amp "soft-faults" and reduces output power by about 2.5 dB by
switching in an input attenuator at the 500W 2:1 reflected power point,
and it flashes a red LED to alert you to this so you can adjust driver
power (or SWR via an external tuner) down a bit. Once this is corrected
below this threshold by the operator, the KPA500 automatically goes back
to full gain. It also does this for minor overdrive conditions.
Of course, for excessive SWR events (wrong antenna, open antenna etc),
and severe overdrive, the amp protects itself by immediately hard
faulting and going into bypass mode. After correcting the fault, just
push the operate/standby switch to get back on-line. While at Contest
University, our Italian representative surprised me by demonstrating
this feature to customers by pulling the coax from the dummy load while
the amp was transmitting. After I recovered from my surprise, I realized
the amp was perfectly happy and had protected itself as advertised :-)
But don't try this at home, as he also received a minor RF burn to help
him remember this event..
73, Eric WA6HHQ
www.elecraft.com
====
On 5/11/2011 9:24 AM, Geoffrey Downs wrote:
> The manual says the bargraph shows green ("normal") up to an SWR of 1.5:1,
> yellow ("marginal") from 1.5:1 to 2.1:1 and red ("excessive") above that.
> Does this mean no inhibition of output by the protection system (and no
> need for it) up to 1.5:1 but progressive reduction of output above? If so,
> will the amp operate without damage in the yellow zone and what %
> reductions in output might be expected up to 2.1:1? Also in what conditions
> of SWR does the intelligent 2.5db output reduction apply; and at what SWR
> does output shut off altogether - ie the REFL HI fault condition.
>
> ...As long as the actual reflected power is below that for a 2:1 SWR at
> 500W...
Which is quite a bit (62.5 watts), so it's pretty tolerant.
Tony KT0NY
73
Geoff
G3UCK