Half a turn, if you could throw some light on this it would really help
The concept of half a turn through a toroid is a bit weird.
With toroids, if the wire passes through the hole, that is one turn.
A fractional turn does not (cannot) exist.
Refer to the pictures in my attachment.
In the case of this transformer, there are two ferrite cylinders mounted side by side.
Brass tubes pass through the cylinders.
At one end, the tubes are joined together with a flat conductive sheet. Either a piece of brass or a piece of circuit board material.
This end connection is a centre tap.
The other ends of the tubes are joined by a piece of circuit board material, but the copper is cut so that the tube ends are not connected.
These two ends connect to the collectors of the PA transistors.
We now have our "half turn".
To make the "Three turn" winding, enamelled copper wire is passed through the inside of both tubes several (three?) times.
This makes the connection to the antenna etc.
Don't forget the lowpass filter. This amplifier WILL make some horrendous harmonics without one.
JimB