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On Wed, 21 May 2008, Alan Peake wrote:
Hello all, I am trying to muliply a 72MHz crystal oscillator to 1296 MHz. My first approach was to just make a series of X2 or X3 transistor mulipliers to get the require X18 multiplication fact. However, I have found two pieces of equipment in the junk box which just use diode multipliers. One is an old Electrophone UHF CB radio which multiplies the crystal oscillator by 17 (I think, from memory)then uses helical resonators to filter the desired harmonic. The same approach is used in an old King aircraft transponder where the 138 MHz crystal is multiplied to 960 MHz with just a diode and uses the first two stages of an interdigital mixer to get rid of unwanted harmonics. So, the question is, which is the better approach? I just want a reasonably clean signal source to test a 1296 MHz down-converter. The diode approach seems simpler but is it likely to contain more spurious signals than a transistor multiplier chain? Alan VK2ADB I don't know, and one thing to remember is that what was done years ago may no longer be the solution because other things have come along. A single stage of multiplication is of course simplest. But, if you do it in one step, the signal may be so weak that you need stages of amplification at the ultimate frequency. Once upon a time, frequency limits may have made that unfeasible. Also, if you have one stage that basically generates harmonics, and then you expect to pick off the desired frequency, that filtering may need to be much better than multiple stages. If you start with a low enough crystal frequency, the next harmonic may be too close and some of it will get through the filter on the ultimate frequency. If you have a string of multipliers, each does filtering so the next stage only has to deal with filtering out a relatively high frequency. Note that your two examples aren't comparable. The first example you say multiplies by 17, while the second only multiplies by 6. Even in the old days, it wasn't uncommon to see a jump like 6, but something like 17 was less common. The real trick seems to be to start with as high a frequency as possible. Then the multiplication needed is limited, and it's far easier to filter out harmonics from a higher frequency crystal than a lower one. Michael VE2BVW |
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