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Old July 12th 03, 12:28 AM
Uncle Peter
 
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Some early commercial broadcast FM transmitters used very low
fundamental crystal frequencies; the large frequency mulitplication
was needed to produce the relatively wide FM deviation.

Pete

"Frank Dresser" wrote in message
...
I have 112.30 kc crystal and I'm curious about what it was originally used
for and what sort of equiptment it was used in. It's in a metal can, like

a
short version of a 6L6, with an octal base. It's marked GENERAL ELECTRIC
as well as with the frequency and several other numbers.

I'm vaguely aware that this band is used for some sort of maratime

purpose,
but I don't know exactly what.

I hooked it to an audio generator and a scope, and it's series resonant at
more or less the marked frequency.

Frank Dresser




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Old July 12th 03, 09:30 PM
Frank Dresser
 
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" Uncle Peter" wrote in message
news:6JHPa.1933$zd4.313@lakeread02...
Some early commercial broadcast FM transmitters used very low
fundamental crystal frequencies; the large frequency mulitplication
was needed to produce the relatively wide FM deviation.

Pete


Good thought. So, I paged through an old FM book which has several
transmitter block diagrams. The RCA transmitter uses a master oscillator at
5.394 which is tripled a couple of times, then doubled, for an output at
97.1 mc. The same oscillator goes through divide by three, divide by four,
and another divide by four dividers. This ends up as 112.38 kc. But that's
not all. It goes through another divide by 5 divider. The crystal
oscillator, in this case 112.38 kc, similiarly gets divided by five, and is
applied to a couple of 45 degree phase shifters. Then both reference
sighals divided from the master oscillator and the phase shifted crystal
oscillator, are applied to a couple of balanced modulators which control a 2
phase motor coupled to the master oscillator's variable capacitor. Whew!

Maybe so. Thanks!

Frank Dresser




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Old July 13th 03, 06:42 AM
matt weber
 
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On Fri, 11 Jul 2003 19:28:23 -0400, " Uncle Peter"
wrote:

Some early commercial broadcast FM transmitters used very low
fundamental crystal frequencies; the large frequency mulitplication
was needed to produce the relatively wide FM deviation.

Pete

"Frank Dresser" wrote in message
...
I have 112.30 kc crystal and I'm curious about what it was originally used
for and what sort of equiptment it was used in. It's in a metal can, like

a
short version of a 6L6, with an octal base. It's marked GENERAL ELECTRIC
as well as with the frequency and several other numbers.

If it is in a can with an octal base, it is probably in an 'oven',
which means very hight stability.
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Old July 13th 03, 02:34 PM
Frank Dresser
 
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"matt weber" wrote in message
...

If it is in a can with an octal base, it is probably in an 'oven',
which means very hight stability.


I'm sure you're right about that, but I don't get any continuity between any
two pins. I guess the heater's burned out or the thermostat contact is bad.

Frank Dresser


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