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Wes:
By "master clock" (or bus clock), I take it the digital osc on my motherboard running at 266Mhz and exists as chip with an in-house part number only, can't really check. I suspect it to be a UHF-high precision op amp with crystal controlled feedback used as an osc, or a set of digital logic gates with osc established though xtal feedback--either way, a square wave out. John "Wes Stewart" wrote in message ... On Thu, 28 Jul 2005 19:59:49 -0700, "John Smith" wrote: Wes: Those osc are a thing of the past... I beg to differ. Bring a junk am broadcast radio near your computer, you will hear literal dozens (well, a bunch anyway!) of osc's freqs going on there, probably not one being generated by a colpitts, hartley or pierce osc circuit... And, with the proper processing, all those waves could be a sine... In all likelyhood, the master clock oscillator for the microprocessor is a Pierce xtal oscillator. All of the other garbage is derived from that. There may also be plug-in cards with their own clock, most likely another Pierce. In case you've forgotten, these are -digital- circuits, sine waves need not apply. Why you guys think that the computer guys have invented some new -magic- oscillator is beyond me. Wait a minute..... maybe I understand after all. |
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