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AF6AY wrote:
On Sep 1, 10:01 am, Micha³ S³omkowski wrote: I'm designing a HF transceiver and I'm going to use SA612/NE612 as a product detector. I'm not sure what is the optimal signal level, which should be delivered to the inputs from the IF amplifier to achieve the best performance? Not intended to be a high-level input device, the Gilbert Cell structure of the SA612 or SA612A should make a good, low-power SSB or CW detector. Mixer ratings put the IP3 maximum at -15 dbm which comes out to about 40 mV p-p at the input. Mixer conversion gain is somewhere in between 14 and 19 db. Both input and output impedances are 1.5 KOhms in parallel with about 2 pFd. Both inputs are DC biased internally so capacitive coupling should be used (very important so as not to disturb internal biasing). Output impedance is 1.5 KOhms from the internal collector loads, should also be capacitively-coupled to the audio output. Expect an audio output level to be about 1 V peak-to-peak maximum with an IF input of ~ 40 mV peak-to- peak. That is running from a +5 VDC supply rail. It is almost the same with a +6 VDC supply rail. Carrier re-insertion/mixing (for "product detector" use) would be about 200 to 300 mV peak-to-peak. Try not to exceed 300 mV p-p as that will cause distortion from "BFO" harmonic generation. Dropping below 200 mV p-p will cause the conversion transconductance to drop until it almost disappears. Interesting application, breaking some new territory there! :-) Basically an HF to low-UHF design, it was intended solely as a low-supply-drain (2.4 to 3.0 mA) front-end mixer, it should work equally well to "down-mix" back to audio range. Mixing is mixing, dependent only on the frequency response of the internal transistor junctions. 73, Len Anderson AF6AY Actually the SA602/612 (IIRC the '602 is the better part, the 612 is a fallout of 602's that didn't meet spec) can work well. The Elecraft K2 uses this chip in several places, including the product detector and the K2 has one of the best receiver spec's out there. They did make use of pads in the signal and hfo paths to get the input levels correct, and no doubt matched input and output impedances correctly as well. An inspection of the K2 schematic's would be a good lesson in setting up this part. |
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