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		Skip to tetrode and grid 
		driven amplifier neutralization 
		  
		Neutralization, or lack thereof, typically causes one or more of the 
		following problems: 
		
			- Instability near the operating frequency
 
			- Increased IMD
 
			- Decreased efficiency
 
			- Difficulty tuning
 
		 
		  
		  
		Grounded Grid Amplifier Neutralization 
		While
        there may be
        exceptions,
        neutralization
        of a high frequency PA
        (power
        amplifier)
        vacuum tube
        amplifier has little to do with VHF or UHF stability.
        
      VHF
        instability
      is almost
        always
        caused by a
        high
        impedance
        (or even parallel
        resonant)
        path from grid-to-ground. The
        high
        grid path impedance
        prevents the
        grid from
        being held at
        ground-potential for RF over some
        range of
        frequencies.
        If the high
        grid-path impedance occurs at or near a
        frequency
        range where
        the anode
        path to
        ground is
        parallel
        resonant,
        the tube can
        act like a
        tuned-plate
        tuned-grid
        oscillator.  
		Neutralization is primarily concerned with correcting unwanted 
		feedback that occurs from normal  
		anode-cathode feedback in a grounded grid amplifier. Anode-cathode 
		feedback is caused by imperfect shielding from anode to cathode inside 
		the tube, as well as additional feedback outside the tube. In reasonable 
		layouts the in-tube capacitance dominates, especially if multiple 
		parallel tubes are used.   
		Lack of neutralization causes the following problems: 
		
			- Instability at or around the operating frequency
 
			- Increased IMD or distortion
 
			- Loss of efficiency on higher frequencies
 
		 
		  
		As in other amplifier stages and systems, excessive unwanted feedback causes the plate 
		current dip and maximum power output to be out-of-sync. This can add 
		positive feedback, increasing intermodulation distortion. In severe 
		cases, the amplifier becomes unstable and oscillates under some tuning 
		conditions at or near the operating frequency. The Yaesu FL2100 series, 
		the Dentron Clipperton L, and the Collins 30L1 amp with 811A tubes, are particularly 
		unstable designs. Collins and Yaesu have a particularly poor feedback 
		systems, while the Dentron has nothing at all! 
		In the FL2100, rumors are some tubes oscillate because they have 
		higher mu or gain. This is actually the opposite of the truth. The 
		FL2100 will oscillate, on standby, with any 572B tube if the bias is 
		reduced enough to allow conduction with the antenna and exciter 
		disconnected. The reason some tubes oscillate in the FL2100 while others 
		do not, while on standby, is some tubes have slightly lower mu and draw 
		current at idle while in standby. If bias is reduced on any brand tube, 
		the FL2100 series will break into oscillation. The HF instability has 
		little to nothing to do with gain, the instability is rooted in the lack 
		of neutralization in early FL2100's, and a
		terrible neutralization 
		system in the later FL2100Z.     
		The worse thing about the incorrect mu rumors is the rumors mislead 
		people into thinking certain tube brands cause problems from gain 
		changes. The real problem is Yaesu used a terrible biasing system that 
		barely cuts the tubes off on standby, they failed to swamp or load the 
		tubes, or properly neutralize them. When Yaesu finally added a 
		neutralization system, they used a terrible system. They added feedback 
		from the antenna side of the tank circuit back to the filament. This 
		creates variable phase and level feedback, with feedback depending on 
		band, tank capacitor settings, and load impedance. This is as bad as the 
		RF feedback in some Collins transmitters that wraps back around two 
		tuned stages that are user adjustable. 
		In cases like this, where the design is flawed, blame is shifted to 
		the tube type, even though the real problem is in the equipment design. 
		In some Collins exciters, certain 6146's are blamed for a poor feedback 
		system that destabilizes the stages. In the FL2100, Svetlana 572B's are 
		blamed for Yaesu bias and feedback design problems. The result of this 
		is certain tube brands get a bad rap, often in well-written white papers 
		that, unfortunately, are based on speculation rather than logical 
		verification.      
		      
		   
		
          
		
        Long grid path of 572B tube and poor shielding from anode to cathode 
		(filament) structure: 
		
          
		
          
        
      
        
      The VHF parasitic circuit, unrelated to neutralization, 
		heavily involves the grid's path to ground. 
		  
		
		  
		Neutralization can only cancel Cpk, and generally has 
		minimal effect on VHF stability of HF power amplifiers.  Lack of 
		neutralization, when required, causes upper HF instability. Upper HF 
		instability can easily damage band switches and other tank components.  
        
        Cathode
        Driven Power
        Amplifier
        
        Many people 
        think 
        grounded 
        grid HF PA's 
        never 
        require
        neutralization.
        In many
        cases this
        is true, but
        in some
        cases it is
        not true.
         
      Tubes with
        low
        impedance
        compact grid
        structures 
      and grid 
      connections 
      that come out 
      of the 
      envelope with 
      very short 
      leads, like
        the 8877,
        have very
        little
        feedthrough
        capacitance. 
      The 8877 is 
      unconditionally 
      stable all the way
        up to UHF. 
      With the 8877 
      grid ring 
      grounded 
      directly to 
      the chassis 
      with a very 
      low impedance 
      connection, 
      the 8877 will 
      not require 
      neutralization 
      or parasitic 
      suppression. 
        
        Some tubes 
        are much 
        different. Tubes
        like the
        3CX1200A7 or
        D7 have
        significant
        feedthrough
        capacitance,
        and exhibit
        "out of
        neutralization"
        behavior 
        above 20 
        MHz. This 
        behavior is 
        characterized 
        by maximum 
        RF output 
        occurring 
        well off the 
        plate 
        current dip, 
        and in some 
        cases (i.e. 
        open circuit 
        input 
        terminations) 
        by actual HF 
        instability. 
        Tubes
        generally
        not
        requiring
        neutralization
        in GG HF
        amps are
        the: 
        8877/3CX1500A7  
        8873 8874
        8875 
        3-500Z 
        3CX800A7 
        3CX1200Z7 
        3CX3000
        series
        3CX5000
        series
        3CX10000
        series 
		  
        Tubes
        generally
        benefiting
        from
        neutralization
        in HF GG
        amps are
        the: 
        
        810,  
        811A, 833, 
        572B,  
        100TH, 
        304TH,  8005, 
        3CX1200A7, 
        and 
        3CX1200D7.  
        
        Tetrodes and 
        pentodes generally
        have very
        low feedback
        when their
        grids
        operate at
        RF ground
        potential. 
        Connecting a
        beam forming 
        plate, screen 
        grid, or
        control grid
        to the
        cathode 
        changes 
        things. With 
        a grid or 
        beam forming 
        plate tied 
        back to the 
        cathode, 
        feedback can 
        increase to 
        the point of 
        instability.
        Some
        amplifiers, 
        such as the Amp
        Supply
        LA1000 or
        Dentron
        sweep tube
        amps, were
        unstable on
        ten meters
        because the
        control grid
        was tied
        back to the
        cathode.  While 
        these 
        amplifiers 
        could have 
        been 
        stabilized 
        through 
        neutralization, 
        the customer 
        was left to 
        simply load 
        them heavily 
        enough to 
        stabilize 
        them.     
        
        
      
        Tubes
        with better
        internal
        shielding,
        short
        wide grid leads,
        compact
        grid
        structures,
        and close
        spacings not
        only work
        better at 
        upper high
        frequencies,
        they are
        also significantly
        more stable 
        at VHF. Such 
        tubes
        rarely
        require
        neutralization
        or parasitic
        suppression! 
        The most 
        stable tubes 
        are designed 
        to work at 
        VHF and 
        higher, the 
        least stable 
        tubes 
        generally 
        make poor 
        VHF 
        amplifiers. 
        How
        Do We
        Neutralize a
        Grounded
        Grid
        Amplifier?
          
        Electrical
        Equivalent
        Grounded
        Grid
        Amplifier 
        
         
        In
        the circuit
        above, T1
        inverts
        phase 180
        degrees.
        Cneu
        approximately
        equals Ckp,
        the cathode
        plate
        capacitance
        (or
        feedthrough
        capacitance)
        of the tube.
        Unwanted
        feedthrough
        capacitance,
        Ckp, varies
        widely with
        frequency.
        This
        capacitance
        is not
        frequency
        linear. It
        has less
        reactance at
        higher
        frequencies,
        and higher
        reactance at
        lower
        frequencies.
        The absolute
        equivalent
        value of Ckp
        varies more
        than a pure
        capacitor
        would with
        frequency
        because all
        stray
        inductances,
        including
        Lint
        (internal
        lead
        inductance)
        and Lext
        (external
        lead
        inductance),
        cause Ckp to
        have a
        reactance
        vs.
        frequency
        slope much
        more rapid
        than a
        normal fixed
        capacitor.
        This means
        we can
        really only
        neutralize a
        PA perfectly
        over a small
        range of
        frequencies. 
        In
        the
        Ameritron
        811H
        amplifier,
        neutralization
        is almost
        perfect on
        fifteen 
        through ten
        meters. The 
        typical 
        feedthrough 
        null is 35 
        to 45 dB. 
        The 811H 
        neutralization does a 
        good job
        from 7 to 45
        MHz, where 
        feedthrough 
        is less than 
        -20 dB. 
        Feedthrough 
        capacitance 
        is so low 
        perfect
        neutralization
        is not 
        required below 
        10 MHz. Above 45 MHz
        the parasitic
        suppressors
        load the
        circuit
        enough to
        greatly
        decrease
        gain and
        stabilize
        the stage. 
        
        The AL-811H 
        is perfectly 
        stable and 
        will not 
        break into 
        oscillation 
        on any band 
        if
        we remove
        the antenna
        or exciter, key
        the PA
        without
        drive, and
        rotate the 
        tuning and 
        loading controls 
        throughout 
        their range.
         
      If 
      we repeat this 
      test with a
        Clipperton
        L, Yaesu
        FL2100, or a
        Collins 30L1
        (all
        un-neutralized
        amplifiers)
        most 
        amplifiers
        (if not all)
        will break
        into
        self-oscillation
        on 15 and 10
        meters. This 
      instability 
      occurs
        because 811
        and 572
        tubes have
        similar
        poor construction. 
      The tubes have very
        poor
        shielding
        from anode-to-cathode.
        Both tube
        types
        exhibit very
        high amounts
        of
        feedthrough
        capacitance,
        enough
        feedthrough
        capacitance
        to make
        un-neutralized amplifiers
        unstable 
      near
        the
        operating
        frequency on
        higher bands, 
      such as 15 and
        10 meters. 
        
      
        
      
      The circuit 
      above is a 
      typical 
      neutralization 
      system for a 
      grounded grid 
      amplifier. The 
      ferrite core is a 1 to 
      2 inch 
      diameter, 1/2 
      inch thick, 
      using a higher 
      Q (low loss 
      tangent) 61 or 65 
      material. 
		
        
		
      Test Setups
		
      Neutralization adjustments are best done on a cold amplifier. To adjust 
		neutralization, three basic test configurations can be used: 
		
        
		
        
		
      In all configurations except "C", input and output ports can be reversed. 
		The source should be variable, and capable of supplying a few watts. 
		Many transceivers will work OK.  
		
      The detector should respond to very low levels, but be capable of 
		withstanding some reasonable power in the event of a circuit or 
		component defect that accidentally allows full source power to couple 
		through. 
		
        
      
        See Grid driven 
		tetrodes 
		Grid
        driven
        tetrodes
        like 6146,
        807, or
        4CX250's
        have high
        power gain.
        High gain
        systems
        require very
        little
        feedback to
        become
        unstable, so
        they
        are generally
        neutralized.
        The also 
        often 
        require some 
        form of grid 
        loading 
        resistor to 
        reduce or 
        stabilize 
        gain. The
        following
        circuit
        shows a
        commonly
        used tetrode
        grid-driven
        amplifier
        with
        neutralization: 
        
          
        L1/C1
        is the
        normal input
        tuning coil.
        Being
        resonant on
        the
        operating
        frequency,
        it inverts
        phase
        180-degrees
        from
        end-to-end.
        C2 is a
        voltage
        divider to
        control the
        feedback
        voltage
        ratio and
        provide a
        return path
        for grid
        excitation.
        Cneut is
        adjusted so
        its voltage
        feedback
        equals the
        voltage fed
        through Cgp
        from plate
        to control
        grid inside
        the tube. 
        Note
        that this
        system
        depends
        heavily on
        L1/C1 being
        resonant at
        the
        operating
        frequency.
        This proves
        the tube is
        only
        neutralized
        at the
        frequency
        where C1/L1
        is set. It
        does not
        stabilize
        the tube on
        any
        frequency
        except where
        L1/C1 is
        resonant. 
        Lp,Lsc,Lk,
        and Lg are
        inductances
        of leads
        inside the
        tube.
        Lp1,Lg1,Lk1,
        and Lsc1 are
        lead and
        component
        inductances
        that occur
        outside the
        tube. 
        While
        the feedback
        adjustment
        setting of
        Cneut holds
        true for
        multiple
        bands near
        the initial
        adjustment
        frequency,
        it only
        actually
        neutralizes
        the tube on
        the band in
        use at any
        moment of
        time! 
        In
        a 160-10
        meter PA,
        Cneut
        generally
        only works
        properly
        over two or
        three bands.
        It is
        usually set
        near 15
        meters so it
        has the most
        effect where
        it is needed
        most. By
        the time we
        get down to
        40 meters
        and lower,
        feedback
        voltage
        through Cgp
        is generally
        through such
        a high
        reactance
        that the
        lack of
        proper
        balancing is
        meaningless. 
		Additional stability can be added by loading the grid 
		with a broadband termination resistance. This makes neutralization much 
		less critical, and may at times even eliminate the need to neutralize. 
		This resistor would go from the control grid to ground and ideally be 
		added right at the tube. Unless the resistor is an integral part of the 
		bias system, it must be "dc blocked" with a low impedance series 
		capacitance so it does not affect grid bias. 
        Neutralization
        Neutralization
        generally
        only affects
        operation
        near or at
        the desired
        operating
        frequencies.
        Neutralization
        is normally
        optimized
        near the
        upper
        frequency
        end of
        operation,
        perhaps
        between 15
        and 30 MHz
        in a 1.8-30
        MHz
        transmitter
        or
        amplifier. 
         
        Neutralization
        is sometimes
        needed
        because
        tubes have
        unwanted
        internal
        capacitances.
        The
        capacitance
        between the
        output
        element and
        the input
        element
        inside the
        tube will
        cause the
        output
        circuit to
        couple back
        to the
        input. If
        large
        enough, this
        regenerative
        feedback
        could cause
        a loss of
        efficiency.
        It might
        cause the
        output
        maximum to
        occur off
        the plate
        current dip,
        reducing
        efficiency.
        It might
        increase IM
        distortion
        or in rare
        severe cases
        may cause
        the
        amplifier to
        oscillate
        someplace
        the
        operating
        frequency.
        (This
        problem is
        common with
        grounded
        grid
        amplifiers
        using 572B's
        like the
        Dentron
        Clipperton
        L,  or
        quads of
        811A's, like
        the Collins
        30L1. Yaesu
        has this
        problem is
        some
        FL2100's.) 
        While a
        need to
        neutralize
        does occur
        in some HF
        grounded
        grid
        amplifiers,
        it is more
        common in
        very high
        gain
        grid-driven
        amplifiers. 
         
        Neutralization
        Adjustment
        Methods
        Neutralization
        is generally
        accomplished
        by adding an
        external
        capacitance
        that is
        excited
        exactly 180
        degrees
        out-of-phase
        with the
        feedthrough
        capacitance.
        One typical
        adjust
        procedure is
        to disable
        the PA stage
        by removing
        anode and screen or
        filament
        voltage. A
        sensitive RF
        detector is
        connected to
        the
        transmitter
        output. 
        Neutralizing 
        a totally 
        cold tube is 
        perfectly 
        fine, 
        because 
        there is 
        very little 
        capacitance 
        shift in a 
        tube with 
        temperature 
        changes. 
        Normal
        drive is
        applied, and
        the
        neutralizing
        capacitor is
        adjusted
        until
        feedthrough
        power is
        minimum. The
        tuning
        controls are
        continually
        peaked for
        maximum
        power on the
        sensitive
        detector
        throughout
        the process. 
        A second
        less
        accurate
        method is to
        watch the
        plate
        current dip
        in a
        properly
        tuned
        normally
        operating
        transmitter.
        The
        neutralization
        capacitor is
        adjusted
        until maximum
        power output
        and minimum
        plate
        current occur
        simultaneously
        as the plate
        capacitor is
        tuned. 
        The best
        method 
        varies with
        the PA
        design, but
        in general
        the most
        accurate
        method is by
        applying
        drive to a
        cold PA
        stage
        (generally
        either
        screen and 
        plate or
        filament
        power is
        removed) and
        feedthrough
        power is
        measured
        with a
        sensitive
        detector. 
        What
        Happens If
        We Don't
        Neutralize a
        New Tube?
        Many
        times
        nothing
        noticeable
        occurs if we
        don't
        neutralize a
        PA. The
        results
        really
        depend on
        how much
        different
        the internal
        capacitance
        is in the
        new tube(s)
        when
        compared to
        the
        capacitance
        of the
        tube(s)
        being
        replaced. 
        If the PA
        requires
        neutralization
        and we don't
        neutralize
        or
        re-neutralize
        it, we could
        find IM
        distortion
        higher. We
        would
        probably
        find maximum
        output power
        occurs
        well-off the
        plate
        current dip.
        The
        un-neutralized
        stage, in
        severe
        cases, might
        oscillate
        somewhere
        near the
        operating
        frequency
        under
        certain
        conditions
        of tuning
        and loading. 
         
        Neutralization
        is generally
        only
        accurate
        over a
        limited
        range of
        frequencies,
        but
        fortunately
        it is almost
        always at
        the higher
        frequency
        end of the
        operating
        range where
        the PA needs
        neutralized.
        The
        manufacturer
        probably
        knows the optimum
        adjustment
        point. In 
        the AL1200 
        and AL811H, 
        the optimum 
        null 
        frequency is 
        21.5  
        MHz. 
       
         
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