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On Fri, 09 Apr 2004 18:38:30 +0100, Paul Burridge
wrote: Hi all, On page 57 of RF circuit Design, Chris Bowick sets out a filter design example. I've posted this to a.b.s.e under the same subject header. He claims that the filter in question - a low pass Butterwoth - matches 50 ohms source to 500 ohms load. However, having checked this out with the aid of a Smith Chart, it appears there is some capacitive reactance present that would require the addition of a shunt inductor to neutralize. However, this would of course totally screw up the filter's characteristics. Upon closer examination, it appears impossible that this type of arrangement could ever be designed without introducing some reactance into the signal path. Or am I nuts? I'd always thought of these kind of filters as being purely resistive overall at Fo but is that really the case? It don't look like it... Design criteria: Centre frequency: 35Mhz Response -60dB at 105Mhz zero ripple(!) Rs 50 ohms Rl 500 ohms Most LC filters are designed to produce the advertised frequency response, given a resistive generator and a resistive load, but they don't generally look like nice resistors themselves, at either port. There are filters designed to look like a resistor, or nearly so, wideband. Picosecond Pulse Labs, among others, sell such. We had a thread on s.e.d. a while back, and Jeroen Belleman posted some nice work, some original techniques to make constant-resistance filters. John |
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