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On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 15:02:30 -0800, John Larkin
wrote: On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 16:31:19 -0600, John Fields wrote: On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 17:57:24 +0000, Paul Burridge wrote: Great. So without a spectrum analyser there's no way to tell? If I examine the output of the multiplier, it's very messy. There's a dominant 3rd harmonic alright (my frequency counter resolves it without difficulty) but the scope trace reveals a number of 'ghost traces' of different frequencies and amplitudes co-incident with the dominant trace. All rather confusing. I suppose the only answer is to build Reg's band pass filter and stick it between the inverter output and the multiplier input? shrug --- You may want to try something like this: COUNTER SCOPE COUNTER | | | | | | FIN--[50R]-+-[1N4148]---+----+-------+---FOUT | | [L] [C] | | GND----------------------+----+ The 50 ohm resistor is the internal impedance of a function generator, and when I set it to output a square wave at 1.5VPP, I got 10.8kHz for the fundamental of the tank. Then I tuned the function generator down until I got a peak out of the tank, and here's what I found: Fin Fout Vout fout/fin kHz kHz VPP -----|-----|------|--------- 10.8 10.8 0.9 1.0 3.58 10.8 0.25 3.02 ~ 3 2.14 10.8 0.2 5.05 ~ 5 So with a square wave in there were no even harmonics and it was easy to trap the 3rd and 5th harmonics with a tank. Next, I tried it with a 3VPP sine wave in and got: Fin Fout Vout fout/fin kHz kHz VPP -----|-----|------|--------- 10.8 10.8 1.3 1.0 5.39 10.8 0.9 ~ 2.0 2.14 10.8 0.3 5.05 ~ 5 So it looks like the second and the fifth harmonics were there. There were also some other responses farther down, but I just wanted to see primarily whether the fifth had enough amplitude to work with, and apparently it does, so I let the rest of it slide. So, it looks like if you square up your oscillator's output to 50% duty cycle you could get the 5th harmonic without too much of a problem. If you can't, then clip the oscillator's output with a diode or make its duty cycle less than or greater than 50%, and you ought to be able to get the 5th that way. Historical note: about 1960, a guy at HP was doing exactly this with some new diodes, and he got way more higher harmonics than theory predicts. To figure it out, they hooked up the just-invented HP185 sampling scope (which then used avalanche transistors to make its sampling pulses) and discovered the diode reverse-recovery snap phenom. Soon the scope itself was using this effect. They were originally called Boff diodes, after the discoverer Frank Boff, but the name didn't stick (wonder why?) and they became "snap diodes" and later "step-recovery diodes". I think I may have the HP Journal article around somewhere. See page 31: http://cp.literature.agilent.com/lit...5980-2090E.pdf --- :-) -- John Fields |
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