I've been so intrigued by their DDS transmitters for a while. Knowing that DDS is the best type of transmitter and their specs are absolutely brilliant, I finally decided to buy one. I got the 300W 5G model. It arrived a couple days ago. The build quality is amazing and it is so over-engineered in some ways. HOWEVER, when I first turned it on, I set it all the way to the low end of the band (88) and with the power at 50%. Everything was great. So then I increased the power to 100% and within 30 seconds, the transmitter went no output (no reflected either). After trying a bunch of things, I eventually realized that I'm going to have to open the box and look at the amplifier cause this is serious and the online support wasn't helping (they are VERY responsive, but not that helpful). Once I got to the amp module, I eventually discovered what was going on. There is an area on the low pass filter (or maybe it's a band pass/something else, anyone know?) where the solder started to melt from heat and ran off the pad resulting in an open circuit. I tried to improve the connection myself after it was already proven to be broken, but that only temporarily got the power output back and then the same place overheated again resulting in the same issue of no output power.
I can't believe that a professional transmitter brand is this messed up. Part of why I bought this one was not to muck about with RF, but instead play around with digital audio formats and processing.
So anyway, right now the support team is on weekend, so I'm going to post a photo or two here for you guys to take a look at. Maybe you can see something wrong with the filter board? Personally, I think the filter board looks really strange. I'm used to filter boards all having coils that are the same size and number of turns, but this is all over the place. I then thought, well maybe it's part of the matching circuitry, but I don't think so; pretty sure that's on the amp pallet. So what's going on with this filter board?


