Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wes:
Of course there are millions, if not billions of 'em in my computer, encased in the chips there, but having viewed many, many spec sheets and diagrams of the internal geometry of the chips, can't say I would really bet there is a colpitts commanding the freq of the bus in my computer, nor the daughter boards in their... Now you might be right, it is just an argument I must defer from, since reliable data one way or another cannot be obtained without expending more effort than I am prepared to expend... I'll even grant you a win by default--the argument simply is not deserving of my time, and anyone with access to the internet can look at a diagram depicting components used in the clocks of "modern circuits." John "Wes Stewart" wrote in message ... On Fri, 29 Jul 2005 12:33:53 -0700, "John Smith" wrote: Ham op: Just drew the circuit of a xtal in the feedback of a high precision op amp circuit... hmmm, could be colpitts--but can't see the resemblance... Just drew the circuit of an xtal chucked in the feedback line of a set of logic gates... hmmm, that could be colpitts too, but again, can't see the resemblance... Draw a transistor (FET, or triode) with a capacitor from collector (drain, plate) to emitter (source, cathode), an inductor from collector to base (gate, grid), and a capacitor from base to emitter. Ground the emitter and everything connected to it and take the output from the collector. You have a Pierce. Replace the inductor with a crystal and you have a Pierce oscillator with the crystal operating in the anti-resonant mode. Ground the collector and everything connected to it and take the output from the emitter. You have a Colpitts. Replace the inductor with a crystal and you have a Colpitts oscillator with the crystal operating in the anti-resonant mode. Insert a crystal between the emitter and the two capacitors connected to it and take the output from the emitter and you have a crystal oscillator operating at series (or overtone) resonance. Stick a varactor in there someplace and you have a VCO or VCXO. Clapp, Vacker, Franklin, Butler.... they are all just variations on an old theme. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Question pools and answers... | Policy | |||
FCC Morse testing at 16 and 20 WPM | Policy | |||
New Candidate for 'Youngest Extra' | Policy | |||
New ARRL Proposal | Policy | |||
Low reenlistment rate | Policy |