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I have found that that generating a narrow pulse with a current source works
well for me. The oscillator gets going rather quickly because the narrow pulse has a wide frequency spectrum and since the ideal current source is an open it doesn't impact the circuit operation. Darrell VE6DWB "Paul Keinanen" wrote in message ... On Sun, 06 Jun 2004 17:59:00 -0500, Ed Bailen wrote: The last issue of QST had a short article on the CircuitMaker Student edition circuit design package. I downloaded it and spent several hours trying various oscillator designs (including the phase shift oscillator discussed in the same issue of QST). I couldn't get any of the designs to oscillate! I was mainly trying Colpitts oscillators. Typically, an oscillator is just a noise amplifier with some frequency selective feedback. In a real oscillator, there is always some wide band thermal noise present, which is amplified, some selected frequencies are circulated back to the input and reamplified and so on. Finally, there is going to be a narrow spectral line and a wide band noise floor due to the thermal noise, assuming of course that the phase, amplification and feedback loss conditions are correct. If the simulator does not simulate the thermal noise inherent in all resistors and semiconductors in temperatures above absolute zero, it is not very likely that the design would oscillate. Inject a very low level wide band noise into the amplifying stage and the oscillation should start. However, I have never seen the CircuitMaker or how to generate a wide band noise signal with it. Paul OH3LWR |
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