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Of course, maybe you don't need such a high Q, Paul. Qu of 30 is
quite reasonable for small SMT RF inductors, at least the type I use. In the following list, "series" means in series from the gate output to the next gate input, in order, and "shunt" means shunt to ground at that point. Anyway, try this (build it or SPICE it or RFSim99 it...add resistors to any simulation to account for the Qu. I'd suggest 3 ohms series and 12k ohms shunt for each 1.8uH.) 47pF series 1.8uH series 470pF shunt 45pF series 1.8uH shunt 3.3pF series 40pF shunt 1.8uH shunt DC blocking cap series high-value DC bias resistors, and the gate input (I assumed to be about 4k net resistance to ground at the gate input, including the bias resistors). It should give you enough voltage gain at 18MHz to drive the second gate at the fifth harmonic, and should attenuate the third at least 50dB if you build it properly, even with low-ish Qu inductors. This is rather a "hack" circuit, but works. The premise is that it's easier to get three inductors all the same value than muck about tuning the inductors. Make the 47pF, 45pF and 40pF caps variable and you can peak up the response at your desired frequency. Your simulation should show a reasonably flat bandpass characteristic, centered at about 18MHz. Paul Burridge wrote in message . .. Hi guys, ISTR that one can improve Q in resonant tanks by having a low L-C ratio. Or was it high L-C ratio. I can't remember but need to know. Can any kind soul help me out? Thanks. p. |
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