| Component | Value | Type | |-----------|----------|-------------| | L8 | 3 turns, 6mm ID, silver-plated wire | Air core | | C20 | 47pF | NP0/C0G | | L9 | 2.5 turns, 8mm ID | Air core | | C21 | 82pF | NP0/C0G | | L10 | 3 turns, 6mm ID | Air core | | C22 | 120pF | NP0/C0G |
Last updated: May 2026. Specifications based on reverse-engineering five distinct WLX-896B units. Proceed at your own risk. Wlx-896b Schematic, WLX-896B pinout, WLX-896B power supply, repair, RD70HVF1, BLF188XR, RF amplifier schematic, FM broadcast amplifier, push-pull LDMOS schematic.
The WLX-896B runs hot. If your schematic does not show thermal tracking resistors (e.g., a 100Ω PTC in the bias divider), add one. Otherwise, thermal runaway will destroy the finals. 3.5 Output Low-Pass Filter (7th Order) Typical values for 88-108 MHz (as seen on actual WLX-896B boards): Wlx-896b Schematic
For those who want to modify the WLX-896B for more power: don’t. The PCB traces cannot handle more than 200W. Instead, focus on improving cooling (replace the stock fan with a 120mm Noctua) and increasing the input capacitor bank to 4700µF.
If you are repairing one, start with the power supply and bias voltages. Check the gate stopper resistors. And never trust the “stock” biasing – always set the idle current to 100mA per final device (monitor via the source resistors). Otherwise, thermal runaway will destroy the finals
If you are searching for the , you are likely facing one of three scenarios: your device has blown a final transistor, the power supply is oscillating, or you are attempting a modification to push the unit beyond its stock specifications.
In the world of budget RF amplifiers and high-power FM transmitters, the has earned a reputation as a workhorse. Often found in Chinese-made broadcasting equipment, amateur radio linear amplifiers, and industrial RF heaters, this module (or device, depending on the specific variant) is notorious for being powerful yet prone to failure under mismatched loads. Often found in Chinese-made broadcasting equipment
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