The CT5537-TA is a 5 input 5 output commercial grade DBS amplifier. Unmatched performance, and design features include, rugged die-cast housing, high frequency nickel plated F connectors, and LED to indicate powering.
This amplifier was designed to work with the DirecTV 5 LNB dish antennas and optional International satellite. The CT5537-TA frequency response has been optimized in the range of 250MHz to 1850 MHz, insuring optimal performance on Ka/Ku satellites
- Frequency 250MHz 2150MHz
- Max Input Power 42 dBm
- Slope 8 dB
- Gain
- at 250MHz.. 29dB
- at 1850MHz.. 37B
- at 2150MHz.. 35B
- Features CT5537-TA
- Specifications
- Input Return Loss
- 250MHz 2150MHz 15dB
- Output Return Loss
- 250MHz 2150MHz 16dB
- Port to Port Isolation
- 250MHz 2150MHz 50dB
- Mechanical
- Size(L,W,H) 6.25x3.25x.75
Gain The gain of an amplifier is the ratio of output to input power or amplitude, and is usually measured in decibels. (When measured in decibels it is logarithmically related to the power ratio: G(dB)=10 log(Pout/Pin)).
Bandwidth The bandwidth (BW) of an amplifier is the range of frequencies for which the amplifier gives "satisfactory performance". The "satisfactory performance" may be different for different applications. However, a common and well-accepted metric are the half power points (i.e. frequency where the power goes down by half its peak value) on the power vs. frequency curve. Therefore bandwidth can be defined as the difference between the lower and upper half power points. This is therefore also known as the −3 dB bandwidth. Bandwidths for other response tolerances are sometimes quoted (−1 dB, −6 dB etc.).
A full-range audio amplifier will be essentially flat between 20 Hz to about 20 kHz (the range of normal human hearing.) In minimalist amplifier design, the amp's usable frequency response needs to extend considerably beyond this (one or more octaves either side) and typically a good minimalist amplifier will have −3 dB points < 10 and > 65 kHz. Professional touring amplifiers often have input and/or output filtering to sharply limit frequency response beyond 20 Hz-20 kHz; too much of the amplifier's potential output power would otherwise be wasted on infrasonic and ultrasonic frequencies, and the danger of AM radio interference would increase. Modern switching amplifiers need steep low pass filtering at the output to get rid of high frequency switching noise and harmonics.
Efficiency Efficiency is a measure of how much of the input power is usefully applied to the amplifier's output. Class A amplifiers are very inefficient, in the range of 10–20% with a max efficiency of 25%. Class B amplifiers have a very high efficiency but are impractical because of high levels of distortion (See: Crossover distortion). In practical design, the result of a tradeoff is the class AB design. Modern Class AB amps are commonly between 35–55% efficient with a theoretical maximum of 78.5%. Commercially available Class D switching amplifiers have reported efficiencies as high as 97%. Amplifiers of Class C-F are usually known to be very high efficiency amplifiers. The efficiency of the amplifier limits the amount of total power output that is usefully available. Note that more efficient amplifiers run much cooler, and often do not need any cooling fans even in multi-kilowatt designs. The reason for this is that the loss of efficiency produces heat as a by-product of the energy lost during the conversion of power. In more efficient amplifiers there is less loss of energy so in turn less heat.
Linearity An ideal amplifier would be a totally linear device, but real amplifiers are only linear within certain practical limits. When the signal drive to the amplifier is increased, the output also increases until a point is reached where some part of the amplifier becomes saturated and cannot produce any more output; this is called clipping, and results in distortion.
Some amplifiers are designed to handle this in a controlled way which causes a reduction in gain to take place instead of excessive distortion; the result is a compression effect, which (if the amplifier is an audio amplifier) will sound much less unpleasant to the ear. For these amplifiers, the 1 dB compression point is defined as the input power (or output power) where the gain is 1 dB less than the small signal gain.
Linearization is an emergent field, and there are many techniques, such as feedforward, predistortion, postdistortion, EER, LINC, CALLUM, cartesian feedback, etc., in order to avoid the undesired effects of the non-linearities.
[edit] Noise This is a measure of how much noise is introduced in the amplification process. Noise is an undesirable but inevitable product of the electronic devices and components. The metric for noise performance of a circuit is Noise Factor. Noise Factor is the ratio of Signal to Noise Ratio of input signal to that of the output signal.
[edit] Output dynamic range Output dynamic range is the range, usually given in dB, between the smallest and largest useful output levels. The lowest useful level is limited by output noise, while the largest is limited most often by distortion. The ratio of these two is quoted as the amplifier dynamic range. More precisely, if S = maximal allowed signal power and N = noise power, the dynamic range DR is DR = (S + N ) /N.
|