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Old February 6th 05, 12:24 AM
john jardine
 
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"John Woodgate" wrote in message
news
I read in sci.electronics.design that john jardine
wrote (in
k) about 'Diode and very small amplitude high frequencies signals', on
Sat, 5 Feb 2005:
Test on a 1N4148.
ForwardV DiodeR
+50mV 8megs.
+30mV 9megs.
+20mV 10megs.
+10mv 12megs.
+5mV 21megs.
ReverseV
-5mV 21megs.
-10mV 30megs.
-30mV 270megs.


How did you measure the resistance? Is it an incremental resistance
(slope of the V/I curve at the data point) or the slope of a line
joining the origin to the data point on the curve.
--
Regards, John Woodgate, OOO - Own Opinions Only.
The good news is that nothing is compulsory.
The bad news is that everything is prohibited.
http://www.jmwa.demon.co.uk Also see http://www.isce.org.uk


I didn't measure the resistance. The values just come from the static V and
I plot points on the graph.
Having had my remaining bench DVM, (good ol'e UK, Datron ****e) pack in on
me and 2 battery DVMs keel over with flat batteries and the CMOS buffers
floating off to la la land and 2 crocodile clips secretly fail and finally
my electric pencil sharpener going tits up, I was not of a mind to press
on :-)
regards
john