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On Jun 6, 4:24 am, Scott wrote:
Searching Google, I was able to find a copy of the manual for the frequency doubler unit (HP 11690A) which conveniently describes the operation and has a schematic. I could make one, except there is one part that is just labeled as a transformer (T1) with three windings. That probably wouldn't be too hard to make, but no idea how many turns for each winding... The manual is atftp://bama.sbc.edu/downloads/hp/11690a/11690a_service_6.pdf Ideas?? Scott N0EDV Scott wrote: I recently picked up an HP 8640B Opt. 323 (8640B in a can) and wonder if anyone has information on the external frequency doubler so that it can use it's upper frequency position (512-1024 MHz). I want to get 902 MHz out of it to test the feed for my parabolic dish's return loss (SWR). I can build a diode doubler to generate harmonics and then put a 1/4 wavelength of shorted-end coax across its output to select the 902 MHz harmonic, but I'd like to be able to tune all freqs between the 512 and 1024 MHz without building a lot of shorted stubs. How does HP do it with their doubler? Bandpass filtering? Could one bandpass filter cover that much range?? Maybe something as simple as a low pass filter with an Fco of 1050 MHz or so, but with this, how would I keep the fundamental freq (256-512 MHz) out of the output?? Thanks for any leads! -- Scotthttp://corbenflyer.tripod.com/ Gotta Fly or Gonna Die Building RV-4 (Super Slow Build Version) Beware!! The schematic is a little misleading. The top winding is not coupled to the other two. Consider in a perfect transformer, if it were, the output (right) ends of the upper and lower windings would be identical. The purpose of the top winding is to improve the balance at the output. In the bridges we've built, we normally make two (as nearly as practical) identical transformers, both with bifilar windings, but the one used for the "upper" winding in the schematic shown just shorts the two windings together, so it's just an inductor, but it matches the inductance of the other one, used as a current-mode balun transformer, and also matches the parasitic resistances and capacitances. The circuit for the balun is easy to simulate (e.g. in LTSpice) and demonstrate how the added inductor dramatically improves the balance at low frequencies. As others have pointed out, you really don't need much filtering; the circuit suppresses the fundamental and odd harmonics, so if you've built it carefully, just a LPF that cuts off at 1.2GHz or so should be about all the help it needs, unless you want a really clean signal for some specific application, in which case a little bandpass filter could clean things up further. Cheers, Tom |
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