Volante24
Posts: 31
Joined: 10/12/2006 From: Notre Dame, IN, USA Status: offline
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[/quote] A TX or any TX's RF output is tuned to the antenna length. Check your manual you'll find this information and similar warnings about over-heating the module in this case. TX's without modules suffer too, again it’s about the tuned antenna length not where the RF deck is located. [/quote] Dear Michael, There is no a single word about such precautions in the manuals, at least for Optic and for Lasers. I can assure you if they were there I would have spotted them at once -- I remember these things since late 1960s when the transmitters RC enthusiasts built on their own, were not recommended to operate without antenna for this very reason of overloading the RF output transistor. Not seeing such notes I reckoned that all these problems were in the past off the cell phones era, together with the "ultra-fast" transistors with the unit-gain frequency of 120 or even 60MHz. Ok, I have now specifically checked the manuals for both Laser 4/6 and for Optic, there is no such a warning. It looks like you consider such precautions to be known. If so, I think Hitec people should really find a possibility to put this into the manuals. My question regarding Lasers was due to the fact that the RF output part there is inside the body of the transmitter on the main PCB with plenty of room available. Therefore, easier cooling etc. Not to mention that it would be trivial to incorporate a limiter which take care of possible overload in case of untuned output. In fact, when I checked the Rf output, the voltage did not seem to depend on whether antenna was extended or collapsed on Laser 4. That was not a proof, yet suggested that the circuit there duly handles this situation. In fact, I would like to know if Hitec specifies somewhere the current draw of this stuff. There is an impression that it's too high, the supplied batteries did not last enough for safe flying, so we had to put our own 2500mAh pack. We just checked a week ago one Optic 6 and it turned out to draw 420mA (antenna fully extended); without the RF unit the drain was only 80mA. Sounds noticeably larger than 305mA quoted here in post #108. We are then at a higher risk, right? This can be compared to the 150mAh total drain specified for Laser 4/6, keeping in mind the radiated power claimed the same. What's the reason for such an inefficiency of the module? Frequency synthesizer chip itself should not draw more than 20mA anyway. By the way, since I am a physicist, a discussion I see here suggests me to recall on the conservation of energy principle. That is true in general that a circuit at smaller current drain may dissipate more heat without antenna. However, hardly much in this setting. FCC does not allow the antenna of your TX, is it Optic, Eclipse or Laser, to radiate more than the stated power; in our case it is 500mW -- right? This means that the power dissipated inside the module is always within these 500mW of the consumed power. This is not an amount to discuss where the total consumed power is 2W (in the lucky case) or 3W (for the transmitter we own). In the case quoted by MikeRuth in post #108, the change in the consumed power (assuming 10V input voltage) was 0.3W at the radiated power 0.5W, therefore the dissipated power indeed increased, but inly by 200mW. Too small. Of course, this is not a bullet proof calculation. It assumed that the RF unit is fed by the battery voltage. Hitec people probably can tell us if that is so. Otherwise, a part of the power here is dissipated in the voltage regulator, although I doubt it would be related to the RF power output circuit, maybe only to the synthesizer itself. Conservation of energy does not tell us where precisely the power is dissipated inside the module. Heating case-wise this does not matter much, but for the sake of safety of the circuit it does, since if all the power, or only a part of it goes into the output transistor, makes a big difference for the latter. The upshot of this digression is that our measurements of the current draw cannot tell us responsibly if it is safe or not to run TX in the transmitting mode with the antenna collapsed. If it is not, the manual and other warnings supplied with the system must clearly state this. And it would be helpful -- already for the sake of safety -- if Hitec disclosed what should be the current drawn by Optic with or without the RF unit. Nick
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