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Old March 4th 06, 10:18 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
Risto Tiilikainen
 
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Default mixer: DBM or dual gate mosfet?

Ken Scharf wrote:

The FET-switch mixers seem to be a really nice alternative, and
although they've gotten relatively little visibility in amateur-radio
applications they've become very popular in commercial use (e.g.
cell-phone handsets). I haven't yet had a chance to play with these
myself but they look like fun!



There was an article in the ARRL HB (1995 and probably others)
about using an SD5000 quad mosfet as a mixer. I bought a few
of these transistors a few years ago (now where did I put them,
got lost in the last move!). They are supposed to make
a very good mixer. The only disadvantage was the circuit
required injection at twice the lo frequency as it used a jk flip
flop to develop the required 180 degree injection. I suppose
a balum could do the same thing. In any case the AD9954 DDS I am
thinking of using can clock to 400mhz and develop output to
160mhz, so getting up to 80mhz (for use with a 9mhz if) would still
be no problem.


Hi !

At the same time Signetics included to the same fet family a double fet
SD6000
It was planned for front end applications
Single fets were done under type numbers SD305 and SD306
All three were N-channel enhancement types. Positive bias only.
I wonder whether Signetics still exists. Signetics was bought by Philips
company.

I use those fets successfully in one of my conventional type homebrew
tranceivers.
The first if is having a 10.7 MHz xtal filter. That is mixed down to
455 kHz either with 10.245 MHz or 11.155 MHz xtal
Sideband selection is done with the selection of mixing direction.
455 kHz is using Collins mechanical filter having very good shape factor
and special skirt for lower sideband use.

73, Risto OH2BT