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Paul Burridge wrote:
An inductor in series with the varactors, then another one in parallel with the series combo can get you a very wide range of impedance from a decent varactor. Thanks, is this the kind of thing you mean? +-------+ | | | | | | C| | L1 C| | C| | | | | | V | D1 - | | C| Applied DC control voltage | C| L2 Line --------------------+ C| | | | | D2 - | ^ | | | | | | | +-------+ View in FP font. created by Andy´s ASCII-Circuit v1.24.140803 Beta www.tech-chat.de Right. I might make the series inductors symmetrical, if I needed the tap point to be near signal ground (e.g. with a centertapped coil or a differential pair driving it). Last time I used this trick was in a 160-MHz phase shifter. The two inductors will generally be about the same size for best results with a hyperabrupt varactor--5 minutes with a math program will give you the right values. Generally you need to keep the reactance capacitive if you're resonating a crystal against this combination--there are multiple operating frequencies otherwise, since the resonator will look capacitive almost everywhere. Cheers, Phil Hobbs |