On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 15:32:23 +0000, Ian Bell wrote:
Paul Burridge wrote:
Hi all,
Is there some black magic required to get higher order harmonics out
of an oscillator?
I'm only trying to get 17.2Mhz out of a 3.44Mhz source and am thus far
failing spectacularly. I've tried everything I can think of so far to
no avail. All I can get apart from the fundamental is a strong third
harmonic on 10.32Mhz, regardless of what I tune for.
In RF circles, the 'normal' way to do this would be a simple Class C
amplifier with a collector load tuned to the fifth harmonic. In calls C,
conduction only occurs for a small fraction of a cycle which produces a
correspondingly higher proportion of higher harmonics than a square wave.
I've been waiting for someone to post this. I would only add "The drive level,
and the bais point, will vary the amount of fifth (or whichever) you will see."
It's as common as noses in RF, as Ian pointed out. Just look at the average
two-way radio prior to frequency synthesisers. Crystal freqs were multiplied
this way in transmitter chains and for receive injection, although use of fifth
wasn't especially common because you normally had enough design control to use
the more efficient *2, *3 or *4.
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