GE made a number of PAs for the MII all to be driven by the exciter.  I think 
the lowest for normal mobiles was 35 watts.  Also the Exec II PAs will work.

A 35 W set at 35 W draws about 7 Amps and at 20 will drop to 4 Amp.

73, ron, n9ee/r



>From: Nate Duehr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Date: 2007/10/17 Wed PM 07:24:39 CDT
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Reducing power out when on battery backup.

>                  
>
>On Oct 16, 2007, at 10:10 PM, ldgelectronics wrote:
>
>> It looks like the seperate small amp will be the best solution in
>> terms of maximum battery life. I checked another repeater on the
>> bench tonight and found pretty much the same thing as Ron mentioned.
>> You can lower the RF power, but the efficency gets worse.
>
>After having read along the entire thread, I think you're probably  
>right -- another PA that's more efficient at the lower power setting  
>will work best for you, at least to get the project going.  The trick  
>is finding PA's with 250mW inputs, which is pretty low for most "HT"  
>type PA's, etc.
>
>(It's not shown on their website, but Henry will modify their PA's  
>for a 250mW input, according to a recent e-mail exchange I had with  
>them about a Henry that the club owns but hasn't been useful to us,  
>since we went to the MASTR II Station/Repeaters.)
>
>Anyway, to add more ideas -- I just thought I'd mention that there is  
>a lower-power VHF stock MASTR II PA that only has the driver board,  
>minus the final board, that has a coax jumper across to the low-pass  
>filter board.  Once in a while you see them on eBay.
>
>I believe it's 40W continuous-duty, but I'd have to go check the LBI's.
>
>There are also the "mobile sticking out the back" style of "station"  
>PA's that are just the back end of a mobile sticking through a  
>mounting plate that fits where the stock GE PA goes.  They're not  
>"officially" rated for continuous-duty, but could be turned down to a  
>fairly low power if they had the same "modification" to remove the  
>final board, and/or some came that way.  (Again, I'd have to go pull  
>up the LBI's for those to see how many different "varieties" GE made.)
>
>Any of those other stock lower-power GE PA's could be switched in and  
>out by switching the exciter's output between the two PA's using a RF- 
>rated relay, etc.
>
>Just another thing to think about... if you can find them.
>
>I have only run across one of the low-power VHF continuous-duty PA's,  
>and it came from a remote-base setup for the railroad in Canada,  
>apparently -- judging by the fact that it has a GE Canada badge, and  
>I bought it from a Canadian.  (GRIN)
>
>It only had two or three sets of heatsink fins, versus the usual full  
>compliment across the back of the PA.  It'd be easy to spot in photos  
>in an eBay auction, etc.
>
>Might be something to keep an eye out for.
>
>--
>Nate Duehr, WY0X
>
>            


Ron Wright, N9EE
727-376-6575
MICRO COMPUTER CONCEPTS
Owner 146.64 repeater Tampa Bay, FL
No tone, all are welcome.


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