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Old February 23rd 05, 04:28 AM
Leon Heller
 
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"andreas magun" wrote in message
...
Leon Heller wrote:
"andreas magun" wrote in message

Thanks for your reply,

I have checked the output power (voltage) from my quadrature driver with
a 50 Ohm load. The output voltage dropped by a factor 2,
indicating a good match. The same happened when I attached the
mixers (SBL-1) instead. I assumed that the LO-input resistance of an SBL-1
at 7 MHz is close to 50 Ohm and purely resistive.


Diode mixers make a real mess of the input LO signal, if you look at what
happens to it with a 'scope. They have to be fed from a 50 ohm resistive
source, but they are not really resistive themselves.

Leon


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Old February 23rd 05, 03:52 PM
 
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On Wed, 23 Feb 2005 04:28:27 -0000, "Leon Heller"
wrote:

Diode mixers make a real mess of the input LO signal, if you look at what
happens to it with a 'scope. They have to be fed from a 50 ohm resistive
source, but they are not really resistive themselves.


yes they do. I've also used square wave drive and found that you have
to be sure your really driving them with 7-10DBM. A 74F74 really
can't do that though it looks that way. I found I had to use a
parallel group of 74HCT244 buffers (minimum of three) to get good
drive.

Allison

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Old February 23rd 05, 06:26 PM
Leon Heller
 
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wrote in message
...
On Wed, 23 Feb 2005 04:28:27 -0000, "Leon Heller"
wrote:

Diode mixers make a real mess of the input LO signal, if you look at what
happens to it with a 'scope. They have to be fed from a 50 ohm resistive
source, but they are not really resistive themselves.


yes they do. I've also used square wave drive and found that you have
to be sure your really driving them with 7-10DBM. A 74F74 really
can't do that though it looks that way. I found I had to use a
parallel group of 74HCT244 buffers (minimum of three) to get good
drive.


I suppose what the OP needs is the square wave equivalent of a +7 dBm sine
wave. I'm not sure what that is.

Leon


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Old February 23rd 05, 08:25 PM
Leon Heller
 
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"Leon Heller" wrote in message
...
wrote in message
...
On Wed, 23 Feb 2005 04:28:27 -0000, "Leon Heller"
wrote:

Diode mixers make a real mess of the input LO signal, if you look at what
happens to it with a 'scope. They have to be fed from a 50 ohm resistive
source, but they are not really resistive themselves.


yes they do. I've also used square wave drive and found that you have
to be sure your really driving them with 7-10DBM. A 74F74 really
can't do that though it looks that way. I found I had to use a
parallel group of 74HCT244 buffers (minimum of three) to get good
drive.


I suppose what the OP needs is the square wave equivalent of a +7 dBm sine
wave. I'm not sure what that is.


To answer my own post: I think it should be 1V p-p for the equivalent square
wave, which is the same power as a 0.5V rms sine wave into 50 ohms (+7 dBm).

Leon


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Old February 24th 05, 07:07 AM
andreas magun
 
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To answer my own post: I think it should be 1V p-p for the equivalent square
wave, which is the same power as a 0.5V rms sine wave into 50 ohms (+7 dBm).

Leon



1 Vpp square wave into 50 Ohms would be +13 dbm. What is the maximum
power a SBL-1 mixer will survive?

Andreas


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Old February 24th 05, 10:47 AM
Leon Heller
 
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"andreas magun" wrote in message
...

To answer my own post: I think it should be 1V p-p for the equivalent
square wave, which is the same power as a 0.5V rms sine wave into 50 ohms
(+7 dBm).

Leon


1 Vpp square wave into 50 Ohms would be +13 dbm.


I don't think it is, the average value (same as RMS) will be 0.5V, which is
+7 dBm.

What is the maximum
power a SBL-1 mixer will survive?


I think it will take +13 dBm, performance will suffer if it is overdriven.

73, Leon




--
Leon Heller, G1HSM
http://www.geocities.com/leon_heller


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Old February 24th 05, 11:05 AM
Verizon News
 
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Keepthis in mind:
+7dbm (the recommended RMS input for a level 7 mixer) is about 1.5Vpp sine.
This holds up to reason, as a DBM has two diode-drops that the LO must
overcome in order to switch the diodes properly. Therefore, if you use a
square wave, you also need to supply about 1.5Vpp, or the diodes won't
switch.

There are two common misconceptions many people hold about these devices.
One is that they are inherently 50 ohm devices. In reality you will only see
50 ohms on a given port if the other two ports are also terminated in 50
ohms. You could run the device just as well at 75 ohms if you keep it
balanced properly. Also, many people think that the LO input is power
dependent. This only partially true. It's really voltage dependent,
requiring sufficient drive voltage to turn on the diodes and pump an amount
of current through them that is large compared to the expected input RF
signal.

There is no magic in these things. They're just diode DPDT switches that
reverse the polarity of the RF signal at a rate determined by the LO
frequency. This is essentially the same as multiplying the RF signal by +/-1
at the LO rate. Simple math shows that this multiplication process yields
the sum and difference frequency products. The more symmetrical the LO
switching waveform, the more perfect the multiplication. This is why square
wave LO drive is preferred.

Joe
W3JDR




"andreas magun" wrote in message
...

To answer my own post: I think it should be 1V p-p for the equivalent
square wave, which is the same power as a 0.5V rms sine wave into 50 ohms
(+7 dBm).

Leon


1 Vpp square wave into 50 Ohms would be +13 dbm. What is the maximum power
a SBL-1 mixer will survive?

Andreas



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Old February 24th 05, 02:58 PM
 
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On Thu, 24 Feb 2005 11:05:46 GMT, "Verizon News"
wrote:

Keepthis in mind:
+7dbm (the recommended RMS input for a level 7 mixer) is about 1.5Vpp sine.
This holds up to reason, as a DBM has two diode-drops that the LO must
overcome in order to switch the diodes properly. Therefore, if you use a
square wave, you also need to supply about 1.5Vpp, or the diodes won't
switch.

There are two common misconceptions many people hold about these devices.
One is that they are inherently 50 ohm devices. In reality you will only see
50 ohms on a given port if the other two ports are also terminated in 50
ohms. You could run the device just as well at 75 ohms if you keep it
balanced properly. Also, many people think that the LO input is power
dependent. This only partially true. It's really voltage dependent,
requiring sufficient drive voltage to turn on the diodes and pump an amount
of current through them that is large compared to the expected input RF
signal.

There is no magic in these things. They're just diode DPDT switches that
reverse the polarity of the RF signal at a rate determined by the LO
frequency. This is essentially the same as multiplying the RF signal by +/-1
at the LO rate. Simple math shows that this multiplication process yields
the sum and difference frequency products. The more symmetrical the LO
switching waveform, the more perfect the multiplication. This is why square
wave LO drive is preferred.

Joe
W3JDR


Thank you. I've worked with them for years and the number of myths
are amazing. An SBL-1 is an amazingly rugged device and +13Dbm
is not a problem.

One problem with using digital logic, especially ttl to drive them is
that TTL is a current and voltage limited output with a variable
output impedence. A logic low can sink more current that a logic high
can source and that means significant non-linear behavour.
Also bipolar TTL logic high is not 5V, typically is around 3.2-3.5V at
rated current load and worse at higher currrent. When you drive a
DBM with it that tends to show as degraded signals, spurs, level
problems. When I drive a DBM with logic I use CMOS drivers as they
offer near symetrical drive for both levels and better overall output
voltage. So it's important to know the driver can supply the current
(about 30ma P-P) and the average 74F74 can do that only marginally and
if there is any attenuation between the '74 and the DBM it's not going
to work. Buffer it with a 74CH244 (octal buffer) with 4 buffers in
parallel and you can easily push the 60maP-P at 5VP-P and allow for a
50ohm 5db attenuator for a more correct level. However, pay attention
to grounding and bypassing the CMOS under those uses they can send
annoying high current spikes into the power sources.

Allison
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Old February 24th 05, 07:45 PM
andreas magun
 
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Verizon News wrote:
Keepthis in mind:
+7dbm (the recommended RMS input for a level 7 mixer) is about 1.5Vpp sine.
This holds up to reason, as a DBM has two diode-drops that the LO must
overcome in order to switch the diodes properly. Therefore, if you use a
square wave, you also need to supply about 1.5Vpp, or the diodes won't
switch.

There are two common misconceptions many people hold about these devices.
One is that they are inherently 50 ohm devices. In reality you will only see
50 ohms on a given port if the other two ports are also terminated in 50
ohms. You could run the device just as well at 75 ohms if you keep it
balanced properly. Also, many people think that the LO input is power
dependent. This only partially true. It's really voltage dependent,
requiring sufficient drive voltage to turn on the diodes and pump an amount
of current through them that is large compared to the expected input RF
signal.

There is no magic in these things. They're just diode DPDT switches that
reverse the polarity of the RF signal at a rate determined by the LO
frequency. This is essentially the same as multiplying the RF signal by +/-1
at the LO rate. Simple math shows that this multiplication process yields
the sum and difference frequency products. The more symmetrical the LO
switching waveform, the more perfect the multiplication. This is why square
wave LO drive is preferred.

Joe
W3JDR



Thank you all for your help, suggestions and especially for the simple
explanation that the mixer diode pairs need enough voltage for
switching. I will remeasure with higher voltages and use buffers that
supply enough current to drive the mixer.

Andreas

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