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In article , Uwe
writes: 12V, holy cow! If I go low voltage I keep it at around 5. I am building a controller board with basic stamps and recently fried an A/D chip by letting it have 12V, it was lethal. Heh heh heh...you low-voltage kids are all alike. Us vacuum veterans would not think twice about the +120 VDC (the "B+") in the old "All-American Five" cheap table model AM BC radios.... :-) By the way, talking about overload. The issue of crystals breaking has been mentioned a few times, but how do I measure what the crystal "sees" for current and what is tooo much??? Seriously, folks, the websites for International Crystal, Corning Frequency Control division, etc., all give specs on various sizes and cuts of their quartz crystal units. Few really "measure" the crystal drive levels since that can be done analytically...if one knows how to do this. If not, there are several hints on the various crystal unit websites for approximating that, such as typical circuits. The best approach at the beginning is to take advice from others on what works and what doesn't...such as the old, old FT-243 holder crystals can take more power dissipation (thicker slice of quartz) than most of the smaller HC-6 holder units. The newer SMD quartz crystal units have very low power specs and should not be used with most vacuum tube circuits because of that. Having been in the electron-pushing racket for better than a half century and bridging the tube and transistor eras, I've never experienced any quartz crystal physically "breaking." If a quartz crystal circuit stopped working, the quartz unit just sat there without a sound, same as it did when it worked OK. :-) Only the oscilloscope trace knew what was in the hearts of such circuits... Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
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