Overview
The SBE SB1-LA was a vacuum tube linear RF amplifier produced by Side Band Engineers during the early 1960s for amateur radio operation. It was designed primarily for use with SBE single sideband transceivers such as the SB-33 and SB-34.
The amplifier used six sweep tubes in parallel and was intended to increase RF output power for SSB, AM, CW, and related amateur radio modes. The SB1-LA became known for compact construction, heavy-duty design, and relatively high power capability for a sweep-tube amplifier of its era.
Technical Specifications
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | SBE (Side Band Engineers) |
| Model | SB1-LA |
| Type | Linear RF Amplifier |
| Frequency Coverage | Amateur HF bands |
| Modes | SSB, AM, CW |
| Tube Complement | 6 × 6JE6 sweep tubes |
| Input Impedance | Approximately 75 ohms |
| Output Impedance | 50 ohms |
| Power Requirement | 117 VAC |
| Era | Early to mid 1960s |
| Construction | Desktop steel cabinet |
Physical Description
The SB1-LA featured a compact desktop cabinet with a gray metal enclosure and front-panel analog metering. Controls included band selection, tuning, loading, and power functions. Ventilation openings on the cabinet allowed cooling airflow for the bank of sweep tubes inside the amplifier.
The amplifier was designed cosmetically and electrically to match SBE transceivers of the same era.
History
The SB1-LA was introduced during the early growth period of single sideband amateur radio communications. At the time, sweep-tube amplifiers offered an affordable alternative to larger transmitting tube designs.
SBE designed the SB1-LA to pair with its transceiver lineup and provide higher output power while maintaining relatively compact dimensions. Later SBE amplifier models, including the SB2-LA, expanded upon the same general design concepts.
The amplifier reflected a transitional period in amateur radio equipment design, bridging earlier tube-era construction with the more compact communications equipment that became common later in the 1960s.