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#1
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As an addition to the various mentions of common diodes as varactors
there is a well publicized British design for a frequency tripler that will put out 2 watts at 1.3 GHz and uses five 1N914's in parallel. I once built an HF transceiver that used CMOS logic chips for all functions except an audio low noise amp and a voltage regulator...with further thought those two could likely be done with CMOS logic too. |
#2
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As a youngster I played with TTL DIP-ICs in my chamber and my parents next
room felt that the tv was going crazy. The pins had long wires... - Henry schrieb im Newsbeitrag oups.com... As an addition to the various mentions of common diodes as varactors there is a well publicized British design for a frequency tripler that will put out 2 watts at 1.3 GHz and uses five 1N914's in parallel. I once built an HF transceiver that used CMOS logic chips for all functions except an audio low noise amp and a voltage regulator...with further thought those two could likely be done with CMOS logic too. |
#3
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Am 25 Nov 2005 06:28:21 -0800 schrieb :
As an addition to the various mentions of common diodes as varactors there is a well publicized British design for a frequency tripler that will put out 2 watts at 1.3 GHz and uses five 1N914's in parallel. I once built an HF transceiver that used CMOS logic chips for all functions except an audio low noise amp and a voltage regulator...with further thought those two could likely be done with CMOS logic too. At least the audio amp, this is nice to build with some Inverters (4069) with resistive Feedback. -- Martin |
#4
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![]() Martin wrote: I once built an HF transceiver that used CMOS logic chips for all functions except an audio low noise amp and a voltage regulator...with further thought those two could likely be done with CMOS logic too. At least the audio amp, this is nice to build with some Inverters (4069) with resistive Feedback. Most of the audio section was done that way. But the product detector had low impedance output and the CMOS amp was too noisy at 50 ohms. A transformer might have done the job but a common-base amp seemed more practical and less prone to picking up hum. Steve |
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