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On Mar 20, 7:43 pm, "Anthony Fremont" wrote:
This sounds like what Chris Jones was talking about. Do you have a link so I could check it out? In addition to the low-noise-low-distortion-high-stability URL's I pointed you towards in my other followup, recent ARRL Handbooks have some really clever low-noise VFO circuits using a multitude of approaches, including explicit AGC circuitry. I have been slowly working my way through the cookbook examples and every example has its merits. In typical ham use, for better or worse, stability and reliability to start-up are often the most important criteria. What you are complaining about when you see a distorted output, is something that is actually a design goal of oscillators that are followed by multipliers. One very common method over the years of decoupling the frequency- determining tuned circuits from other frequencies generated in a radio is to run the oscillator grid tank at half the output frequency and depend on distorition to make the desired output frequency. In the simplest case a balanced or push-pull oscillator is a "No-No" because you WANT the second harmonic. The electron-coupled oscillator that was in the 50's/60's/early 70's handbooks is a classic design. Tim. |
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