"Tim Wescott"  wrote in message 
...
 amdx wrote:
 Hi All,
 Please see pictures and diagram at ABSE.
  I duplicated a circuit for someone because they got a bad
 output waveform.
 Well I did too.
 Capacitor = air variable set at 365pf
 inductor =  41uh aircore
 With freq set at 1.3Mhz I have the voltages as follows;
 Collector - 11.8vdc
 Base - 3.1vac riding on top of 3.2vdc
 Emitter - 2.5vac riding on top of 3.9vdc   (Don't be critical, it's not 
 ac
 if it sets on dc)
 As I shift up in freq at about 2.7Mhz the voltages jump.
 Capacitor = air variable set at 40pf
 inductor = 41uh aircore
 Freq = 3.7Mhz
 Collector - 11.8vdc
 Base - 10vac riding on top of 1.8vdc
 emitter - 1.1vac riding on top of 9vdc
 The base waveform in both senerios is much more sinewave (ish) than the
 output.
  Any ideas how to get a decent waveform? The next step will be a buffer,
 but...
  Note; original schematic used a crystal, I substituted the LC. Could 
 this
 be the
 cause of the distortion?
                                      Thanks,    Mike
 This circuit doesn't look very good from any standpoint other than 
 (possibly) being cheap.  It's questionable for a crystal oscillator in 
 anything but el-cheapo consumer electronics, and just bad for a coil & cap 
 oscillator.  Most of the points have been mentioned already; I'll just 
 reiterate them with my own spin:
 The base biasing is _wrong_.  Biasing a bipolar transistor that way will 
 make it extremely sensitive to device and temperature variations.  You can 
 somewhat get away with it in an oscillator because you're working with a 
 class C device, so the emitter voltage will rise with rising oscillation 
 strength, making sort of a poor-man's AGC (with emphasis on the 'poor').
 Bias should be with a resistive divider on the base, adjusted so that the 
 oscillator starts up nicely yet keeps the emitter voltage from rising to 
 within 1 volt or so of the collector voltage.
 The ratio of C1 and C2 is also extreme.  I'm surprised that you get 
 oscillation at all.  The rule of thumb for a Colpitts is to choose 
 feedback caps with reactances at frequency of around 150 ohms.  You can 
 improve the waveform (and load the circuit less) by retaining the 1nF 
 "C2", increasing the capacitive reactance to the emitter with a smaller 
 cap in series to the transistor emitter, and retaining the take-off point 
 at the hot end of C2.
 I wouldn't build an oscillator like this without following it with at 
 least one buffer stage designed to minimize the effect of following 
 circuits on the oscillator, and following _that_ with an amplifier stage. 
 You're not building tube equipment, transistors don't cost that much -- go 
 ahead and use a few!
 If you don't get a book dedicated to RF circuit design (like Hayward's 
 "Experimental Methods") then at least get a copy of the ARRL handbook and 
 follow the guidelines there.  You can go wrong with them, but not too 
 much.
 -- 
 Tim Wescott
 Wescott Design Services
 http://www.wescottdesign.com
  Thanks Tim,
The base biasing is _wrong_.
 I tried Jim's voltage divider biasing arrangement, it didn't help the 
waveform, but I understand
the temperature sensitivity of the original.
The ratio of C1 and C2 is also extreme.
This circuit and all values was taken from Joseph Carr's "Secrets of RF 
Design"
I did replace the crystal with the LC. He calls this a 1 to 20 Mhz crystal 
osc.
You can improve the waveform (and load the circuit less) by retaining the 
1nF "C2", increasing the capacitive reactance to the emitter with a smaller 
cap in series to the transistor emitter, and retaining the take-off point 
at the hot end of C2.
Sorry, I don't know if I understand what you suggest; Do you mean to say 
connect
a small cap from the connection point of C1 and C2 and the connection point 
of the
emitter and R2?
I have seen several Colpitts osc. that have an inductor in series with the 
emitter resistor,
would that be useful? If so what value for 3 to 6 Mhz.
 On another note; I noticed the base waveform is pretty good. Has anyone 
seen a design that
lightly couples a signal from the base to maybe a FET and buffers it. Just a 
thought!
                      Thanks,
                             Mike