On Sat, 06 Jan 2007 02:31:08 GMT, james wrote
in :
On 5 Jan 2007 10:16:50 -0800, "Telstar Electronics"
wrote:
+++james wrote:
+++ Go and do some research. Gain increases as frequency decreases. The
+++ major problem of using this device at 27 MHz is keeping the gain low
+++ enough so that the amp will be stable. Any amp using this part at
+++ 27MHz will have to have a lot of feedback to minimize gain.
+++
+++Yes the gain would be high at 27MHz... however... having too much gain
+++is never really a big problem... you can always throttle it back. It's
+++having too little gain that comes to get you... LOL
+++
+++www.telstar-electronics.com
**********
right, keep on thinking man. Get a unity gain with the right feedback
and you have an oscillator.
Especially with a high input impedance and large internal capacitance.
Try to run them puppies hard outside the recommended frequency range
and -=POOF=-!!!