2.4Ghz PA module recommendation required

P

Paul Burridge

Guest
Hi all,

Any suggestions? Thinking in terms of maybe 10W out / 200mW in or
thereabouts.

Thanks,

p.
--

"What is now proved was once only imagin'd." - William Blake, 1793.
 
Hi Paul,

Motorola used to produce modules like that. I don't know if they still
do, or if it was all transferred to one of their spin-offs.

Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com
 
Is it for Wi-Fi network?

It could be a tough call. According to FCC regulations we not supposed to
transmit that much, hence readily available products are typicaly limited to
1 Wt, like this one:
http://www.connectronics.com/fidelity%20comtech/

Once I was thinking to use something exotic, like this 1177H10 TVT:
http://www.44tesla.com/dictionary/cat1021.htm
, but to run the network you need the Amp to be bi-directional (like the
first example.)

This one maybe close to what you need
http://www.multicap.be/uk/DM-AMP_BTB.shtml
(the big one with ribs on the picture), it may not be 10Wt, it may be ...
4Wt, by looking at it. I could not open their PDF though - gives me error.
Write them. It is in China, they may be 'pushing the boundaries'.

BTW, if you find out how powerful this Amp is, please let me know too.

Andrey
a8421@intergate.bc.ca





"Paul Burridge" <pb@notthisbit.osiris1.co.uk> wrote in message
news:2l4bn0pj64am8a23ic4drkil4mcjipp6qk@4ax.com...
Hi all,

Any suggestions? Thinking in terms of maybe 10W out / 200mW in or
thereabouts.

Thanks,

p.
--

"What is now proved was once only imagin'd." - William Blake, 1793.
 
Actually, I was wrong in previous EMail:
here is 10 Wt bi-directinal Amp - just found it
http://www.hyperlinktech.com/web/ha2410.php
I did not see it 1 year ago. I guess world is getting better ....

it is expensive though
http://www.hyperlinktech.com/web/amplifiers_2400_page2.php


Andrey


"Paul Burridge" <pb@notthisbit.osiris1.co.uk> wrote in message
news:2l4bn0pj64am8a23ic4drkil4mcjipp6qk@4ax.com...
Hi all,

Any suggestions? Thinking in terms of maybe 10W out / 200mW in or
thereabouts.

Thanks,

p.
--

"What is now proved was once only imagin'd." - William Blake, 1793.
 
On Tue, 19 Oct 2004 20:43:07 -0700, "Andrey" <a8421@intergate.bc.ca>
wrote:

Actually, I was wrong in previous EMail:
here is 10 Wt bi-directinal Amp - just found it
http://www.hyperlinktech.com/web/ha2410.php
I did not see it 1 year ago. I guess world is getting better ....

it is expensive though
http://www.hyperlinktech.com/web/amplifiers_2400_page2.php
It is rather! I wonder how much the internal components cost?? The
site seems a bit short on technical info on these amps. What do they
mean by "bi-directional"? If they're talking about some sort of RX
preamp feature built in, it ain't gonna be 10W surely! :)
--

"What is now proved was once only imagin'd." - William Blake, 1793.
 
What do they
mean by "bi-directional"? If they're talking about some sort of RX
preamp feature built in, it ain't gonna be 10W surely! :)
It is exacty that: PA from Input to Output and LNA another way. Otherwise
you can not run the Network.

And this one does look like 10Wt - judging by the size of the heatsink

Andrey
 
On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 08:01:51 -0700, "Andrey" <a8421@intergate.bc.ca>
wrote:

What do they
mean by "bi-directional"? If they're talking about some sort of RX
preamp feature built in, it ain't gonna be 10W surely! :)

It is exacty that: PA from Input to Output and LNA another way. Otherwise
you can not run the Network.

And this one does look like 10Wt - judging by the size of the heatsink
It does look rather *large* for 10W, I guess. But is this due to the
frequency of operation? I mean, presumably efficiency drops off as one
goes up in frequency so maybe the PA is dissipating more heat than an
equivalent PA operating at, say, 430Mhz?
--

"What is now proved was once only imagin'd." - William Blake, 1793.
 

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