rs928ampreview
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
| rs928ampreview [2026/02/08 12:09] – [Background] g7bcs | rs928ampreview [2026/02/08 13:13] (current) – [Inside the box] g7bcs | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Line 64: | Line 64: | ||
| Up against the rear heatsink panel is the RF deck which consists of a pair of Mitsubishi 2SC2904s in a conventional push pull class AB setup, along with bias stabilisation circuitry and impedance matching magnetics. | Up against the rear heatsink panel is the RF deck which consists of a pair of Mitsubishi 2SC2904s in a conventional push pull class AB setup, along with bias stabilisation circuitry and impedance matching magnetics. | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{: | ||
| + | }} | ||
| A board on the bottom of the case contains 6 low pass output filter networks along with switching relays for the filters, TX and RX signal path switching and two input attenuators. This also contains a directional coupler for forward and reverse power sensing, some relay drivers and a current sensing chip to detect the final current drain. | A board on the bottom of the case contains 6 low pass output filter networks along with switching relays for the filters, TX and RX signal path switching and two input attenuators. This also contains a directional coupler for forward and reverse power sensing, some relay drivers and a current sensing chip to detect the final current drain. | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{: | ||
| + | }} | ||
| Against the front panel is a control board containing the LCD display, front panel buttons, a dsPIC30F6014 processor, an RS-232 level converter, some fan speed control circuitry and power supply regulators. | Against the front panel is a control board containing the LCD display, front panel buttons, a dsPIC30F6014 processor, an RS-232 level converter, some fan speed control circuitry and power supply regulators. | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{: | ||
| + | }} | ||
| There is one further board which houses the three rear panel jack sockets for the control signals and some signal conditioning for the input transmit frequency detection. | There is one further board which houses the three rear panel jack sockets for the control signals and some signal conditioning for the input transmit frequency detection. | ||
| Line 77: | Line 86: | ||
| Few 100W HF amplifiers on the market represent as good value for money as the RS-928, and the sample I received performs well. | Few 100W HF amplifiers on the market represent as good value for money as the RS-928, and the sample I received performs well. | ||
| + | |||
| The RS-928 is a Chinese clone of Juma's work and this may put off some buyers. The performance of the RS-928 would give me confidence in purchasing the Juma PA-100D from Rowaves too, however. It's likely that the latter will have had better attention to component quality and matching, and calibration during production, possibly giving even better performance, | The RS-928 is a Chinese clone of Juma's work and this may put off some buyers. The performance of the RS-928 would give me confidence in purchasing the Juma PA-100D from Rowaves too, however. It's likely that the latter will have had better attention to component quality and matching, and calibration during production, possibly giving even better performance, | ||
| + | |||
| Out-of the box, in my opinion, the RS-928 would be a great companion to the Hermes Lite, FT-817/817, IC-705 and other QRP rigs when used attended in the shack or in a vehicle. Its size and weight probably don't lend it to portable use a significant distance from a vehicle. | Out-of the box, in my opinion, the RS-928 would be a great companion to the Hermes Lite, FT-817/817, IC-705 and other QRP rigs when used attended in the shack or in a vehicle. Its size and weight probably don't lend it to portable use a significant distance from a vehicle. | ||
| + | |||
| The firmware supplied with the RS-928 is clearly based on an old or stripped-back version of the PA-100D code, doesn' | The firmware supplied with the RS-928 is clearly based on an old or stripped-back version of the PA-100D code, doesn' | ||
| + | |||
| Overall, I am very happy with this amplifier, and would recommend it and the Juma PA-100D to anyone wanting a few more watts out of a QRP HF rig. | Overall, I am very happy with this amplifier, and would recommend it and the Juma PA-100D to anyone wanting a few more watts out of a QRP HF rig. | ||
rs928ampreview.1770552541.txt.gz · Last modified: by g7bcs
