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BTW, real air trimmers seem to be far better for temperature stability
than normal plastic dielectric trimmers! In an AM broadcast transmitter using a VXO, a plastic trimmer in series with one of two crystals(mixer setup) gave instability and a deep hetrodyne drone that got worse over several days(unattended remote pirate rig) even though the outside temperature was the same. Replacing it with an air variable trimmer whose plates were apparently cut from two solid pieces of brass mude for utter stability, with no sign of drift over at least a 20 degree temperature change without having to reset it. For noncritical applications, those little plastic variable caps from car stereos are pretty good. Have not used one in an ultra-critical application in a role giving a lot of control over frequency, but when I used one in the 2004 rig to shift a crystal maybe 2KHZ out of 16MHZ, it didn't seem to drift. Of course, a VXO(pulled crystal) is a hell of a lot more stable than any VFO! A VXO and a similar but not the same frequency fixed crystal can give a suprisng tuning range with stability. Put in a crystal oven or even a heated/air conditioned room it would leave little to be desired in stability. For a VFO for any application, the better your parts, the better your results. Wind coil on "air" or unity permeability cores such as wood or ceramic, and epoxy the windings in place. Blow on an oscillator's coil while listening to the beat note with and without the epoxy, and hear the difference for yourself. Wood cores seem to work fine with the epoxy covering. With an air-core coil,a good tuning capacitor, and a circut that minimizes active device contribution to drift, you end up with a lot less chasing drift to do. Best active device for any VFO and probably any VXO as well is a JFET. Almost no heat(unlike a tube), and no junctions in the current path to change characteristics with temperature(unlike a bipolar). If you must use a powdered iron core, keep DC out of the windings as changes in the DC current change the permeability opf any ferrite or powered-iron core. Ferrite cores of any type have been named as an especially bad source of drift in oscillators, so don't use modified IF transfomers as tuners in oscillators expected to be stable. They are fine in tuned small-signal amps, just not in oscillators. In that VXO with the bad trimmer, I got lucky and found the bad part first try, but this is unusual. If you have to track down drift expect hours of work. That's why it takes less tiem to use the good stuff from the start, unless it takes hours of driving or biking to obtain it, of course. |
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