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Hi David,
I've read through the rest of the posts, and in general I think you have a decent selection of books. The couple I'd add: "RF Oscillator Circuit Analysis and Design with Breadboard Experiments" by John Plastonek -- Which is no longer in print, but I could probably scan it in one of these days if you can't find a copy kicking around (I've made active efforts to find this Plastonek guy to ask him about this, and he seems to have dropped off the face of the planet). His oscillator circuits go up to ~100MHz, and he has some discussion as to why you might prefer one oscillator topology over another. "Build Your Own Low-Power Transmitters: Projects for the Electronics Experimenter" by Graf & Sheets (you can preview it on-line at Amazon.com). He has plans in there for transmitters at pretty much all frequency from LF-SHF, and although I haven't build anything in it myself :-), I've heard from other people that the transmitters really do work. "Practical RF Design Manual" by DeMaw -- Probably overlaps a lot of the of DeMaw books; now distributed by MFJ. BTW, I wouldn't be so quick to give up on RF transformers and matching -- any RF circuit with active components in it is going to require some amount of matching, and while at times you can get away without formally considering it, doing so often gives up power or robustness. (I know it's a little disheartening to open up a commercial radio and see that they managed to achileve something like a stereo FM receiver all in 7 transistors and no RF transformers, but such designs are the evolutionary results of a lot of people spending a lot of time trying to cost minimize a product that's produced in the millions. And keep in mind that something like a cell phone today requires over 100 man years to design...) Finally, don't write off books such as "The Art and Science of Analog Circuit Design" -- it's a great example of one of those books that has a lot of great advice in it, but until you've hit your head on the wall a few thousand times encountering the particular problems the authors have, its value isn't apparent. The sort of "tweaking" advice you're looking for with RF circuits is precisely what TAaSoACD is trying to provide... just more to folks building op-amps & data converters than RF circuit. ---Joel Kolstad |
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