Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#22
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() You can use a fundamental mode crystal as an overtone oscillator, but even if you can get it to oscillate, it won't be generating an overtone at 100MHz, since overtone modes of oscillation aren't harmonically related to the fundamental. There is a related phenomenon in the field of piano tuning. It has long been known that overtones (called "partials" by piano people) of piano notes are not exactly related to pitch of the fundamental frequency by whole numbered ratios. Instead they are related by factors like 1.000 2.003 3.007 4.018 5.039 6.092 7.211 etc. The amount by which this series deviates from the ideal whole-numbered ratios is called "inharmonicity" and it differs from one string to another. The stiffer the string, the more inharmonicity. Long thin strings, as are found on harpsichords, have almost no inharmonicity. Short strings in the highest section of the piano have the most inharmonicity. Since one of the goals of piano tuning is to make partials of different notes come out the same, this phenomenon of inharmonicity makes piano tuning inherently more difficult than instruments that have no inharmonicity, like pipe organs. What is perhaps more like quartz crystals is carillon bells. They are tuned at the factory, and each partial is tuned independently and separately by grinding away metal from different levels on the bell. In view of these related phenomena, it is no wonder that overtones of quartz crystals are independent of each other and from the fundamental. -Robert Scott Ypsilanti, Michigan |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Make your own T2FD | Shortwave | |||
We Need a BANDWIDTH-BASED Frequency Plan - NOT Mode-Based. | Policy | |||
BETTER HF FREQUENCY PLAN for AMATEUR RADIO | Policy | |||
Drake TR-3 transceiver synthesizer upgrade | Homebrew | |||
CCIR Coefficients METHOD 6 REC533 // AUCKLAND --> SEATTLE | Shortwave |