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I'm making a quick and dirty frequency "octupler" (x8) that uses a string of
three Mini-Circuits frequency doublers (AMK-2-13+, KC2-11+, KC2-19+) -- 300-312.5MHz in, 2400-2500MHz output (the ISM band). I believe these are just diode ring-based mixers hooked up and optimized to act as doublers; they have an insertion loss of around 11dB. I have buffer amplifiers at the output of each to make up for this loss, but I'm wondering... do I need to bother with bandpass filters as well? Without them each doubler suppresses the fundamental and 3rd harmonic by some 40-60dB (depends on input frequency); the 4th harmonic is suppressed by ~15dB. Is anything undesireable going to happen if I just let everything through? That would mean that at the final (x8) output, I'd still have plenty of lower frequencies around -- albeit pretty well suppressed -- as well as some x12, x16, etc... but the x8 component should still be the strongest by far. For a diode ring-based mixer, it's not entirely clear to me whether or not having some low-level "junk" to the RF input is all that bad. As a man once said to me, "diode mixer RF ports like being driven by squares waves," so the higher harmonics don't seem as though they'd matter much... but will the lower-frequency signals tending to dither the exact turn-on point of the diodes be deleterious? ---Joel |
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