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In article , J M Noeding
writes On Mon, 08 Dec 2003 05:10:02 GMT, Uwe Langmesser wrote: Crystals will operate on a number of fo's. I use three oscillators to test them and each gives a different fo. Be careful and keep the drive level down as some oscillators can cause damage. I had to laugh when I read your post, it sort of reflects my experience, eg. every experiment gives you new and unexpected answers. And I thought it was only me... Uwe ....and it is better when you can laugh about it.... sometimes it is difficult to understand why your xtal won't operate on a 3rd or 5th harmonic when it seems to work for everybody else - and you specified proper overtone xtal for the manufacturer, But it is a lot of bad constructions! In the butler-type xo (popular in UK) you may operate a 27MHz xtal on 45 and even 81MHz (believe it was DCoDA who first described it) But I believe the original question was something else? Xtals testers were so popular in the 60's when amateur run around to surplus stores buying FT-243 xtals, and several such xtal testers are described in CQ, Ham Radio, QST, 73 DL-QTC, QRV, CQ-DL, Electron and other, they run on fundamental frequency using colpitts or pierce type oscillator and measured grid current as measure for excitation 73 Jan-Martin, LA8AK -- remove ,xnd to reply (Spam precaution!) The butler type is a tuned amplifier were there is ideally zero phase across the crystal and hence the crystal can be simulated by a resistor of equal (in practise lower) resistance than the crystal loss. Hence a butler tuned to 100MHz will oscillate a 50R resistor at that frequency. The 100MHZ crystal if 5th overtone will have a fundamental response at approx. 20MHz and a 3rd overtone response at 60MHz . The fundamental response (resistance) will be much lower than the 5th resistance and in a zero phase amplifier with flat response the crystal will preferentially oscillate at 20MHz. Higher order overtones have the same C0 or stray capacitance as the fundamental but this has a lower reactance at higher frequencies. This is the reason and increase in resistance at higher overtones that overtone oscillators get increasingly tricky. -- ddwyer |
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