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I completely agree..................I have a multitude of vias on all of my
boards, especially around the RF components. When a system has 80dB gain at one frequency, it is just to easy to have things fly, otherwise. On another note, I have completed the first pass of my quasi-synchronous detector. Audio is very crisp, and since no PLL is involved, there is no lock to lose. Basically, it consists of splitting the I.F. signal into to paths...........one path feeds the input port of a Gilbert Cell mixer, while the other path feeds the input of a high gain limiter. The clipped output of the limiter feeds the LO port of the mixer, and the audio is taken from the I.F. port of that same mixer. It is interesting, when I compare it to the envelope detector output of the receiver. While the envelope detector output exhibits distortion from the selective fading mechanism, the quasi-sync detector output remains very clean, all the way down to the .1uV lower system limit. My next iteration will use a Philips SA637.................if this circuit work out the way I expect it to, I will have a single chip solution for this function. I just need to check the parameters of the LO input, low frequency limit of the mixer, etc. Pete Telamon wrote in message ... In article , starman wrote: Pete KE9OA wrote: I usually go for less than one tenth of a wavelength for maximum spacing between vias. I never lay out the vias on a grid. This is one of the things I learned at one of the EMI/EMC classes I took at when I was working at Rockwell-Collins. I understand that different folks have different approaches to board design, and these different approaches do work well, my approach has been ok, with boards I have been designing well up to 5GHz. I do need to state that I am not the foremost expert in this field; I am just a simple soul that is scratching the surface of the RF realm! Given that the highest HF frequency is 30-Mhz, then 1/10 wavelength would be about 1-meter. This is much larger than the circuit boards in a radio like the R8, so how important would it be to adhere to the 1/10 wavelength rule for grounding an HF board? We were discussing what had to be done to prevent board features from becoming resonant structures on the board and yes at 3 to 30 MHz it's much less likely due to propagational effects alone but still possible. If a trace on the board is not closely associated with a ground plane then its impedance is high and can look more like a lumped inductor than a transmission line. If the following input to the next device or circuit has enough capacitance it could resonate anywhere in the HF spectrum. There are other reasons for via spacing like tying ground planes together so they look unified electrically. One goal dictating via density in board design is to make the RF return current path for a device on the board as small as possible. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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