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![]() On Mon, 15 Dec 2008, Telstar Electronics wrote: Date: Mon, 15 Dec 2008 06:16:29 -0800 (PST) From: Telstar Electronics Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.homebrew Subject: Doubling On Dec 14, 10:27*pm, "NoSPAM" wrote: *Actually you do not need any nonlinearity to make a doubler (quadrupler, etc.). You mean to tell me that you take a clean sine wave... You might want to consider qualifying your thinking on this by setting a specification for harmonic distortion (in other words, you might need to consider how much of that "clean sine wave" signal has other components in it, including non-harmonic componentes) pass it through... say a single-ended class A amp... You might also want to consider, here, too, how much harmonic distortion THAT class A amplifier also causes which makes a contribution to the output. and you can put a tank on the output of that amplifier... and tune for a harmonic? You will get nothing. You might even more also want to consider that any tuned circuit will pass energy not at the resonance of that tuned circuit. You would probably contribute to your own enlightenment if you actually did some real experiments on this. It does not take long to do. Back when I was an undergraduate student with major in physics (BS, 1966), I worked in a Mossbauer Effect spectrometer lab and we built most of our equipment (dual delay line pulse amplifiers, regulated DC power supplies, repairing survey meters, etc) my boss had me build a waveform converter that used a network of resistors and diodss to convert a sawtooth waveform to sine wave and he was doing this because the book he got the circuit from said that there would be less than 1% harmonic distortion and he was interested in that specification for the spectrometer drives and all of our commercial high quality signal generators were worse in that specification, particulary at the very low frequencies we ran the drives at (less than one cycle per second). So, you have to define what you mean by "clean sine wave." But, I'll also say that, no, you will not get nothing if you tune to the second harmonic and have a linear amplifier (unless, maybe, you have a _perfect_ sine wave and a _perfect_ linear amplifier [the rest of you guys might want to comment on this yeah, I know about Fourier analysis, too]). |
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