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#11
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You're climbing a steep hill here James. It is the % change in frequency
that is the problem. Professional spec analysers use a 2 GHz LO with a 2:1 range (to scan 0-2GHz), but I believe that is a magnetically tuned YIG resonator. If you could get the frequency higher, so the sweep range is narrower, then mix to the desired freq with a balanced mixer...that would be an easier VCO design. Steve K;9;d;c;i The punctuation is my feeble attempt at spam-bot blocking. "James Fenech" wrote in message ... Hi Roy, thanks for the suggestion. I am considering buying this book. Can I ask how much theory, and how deep does it go? I am an engineer (digital electornics and software background) and actually like some theory to help me understand what I am doing. I already have some "real" test equipment, 50MHz CRO, signal generator, multimeter, etc. So "simple" test equipment may not be too much of an improvement. I've looked over the internet, and some books that I have, but found no real example circuit on wideband VCOs. The only "sort of close enough" circuit I found is at: http://www.newwaveinstruments.com/resources/rf_microwave_resources/sections/oscillator_vco_theory_design_circuit.htm#Voltage%2 0Controled%20Oscillator%20(VCO)%20Circuits The second one down - Colpitts. Are there any such examples in this book? Thanks, James. "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I highly recommend _Experimental Methods in RF Design_, by Hayward, Cambell, and Larkin. It's published by the ARRL and available from them and numerous other sources. Besides theory and a lot of real, practical, tested circuits and projects, it includes simple test equipment you can build yourself. Roy Lewallen, W7EL James Fenech wrote: . . . I have the ARRL handbook (1997 or so) but this doesn't have much in the way of theory. Is there any other reference anyone can recommend? . . . |
#12
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2:1 tuning range with varactor tuning is very doable in the frequency range
he's considering. I've done 3:1 at lower frequencies. No steep hill at all. Joe W3JDR "Steve Nosko" wrote in message ... You're climbing a steep hill here James. It is the % change in frequency that is the problem. Professional spec analysers use a 2 GHz LO with a 2:1 range (to scan 0-2GHz), but I believe that is a magnetically tuned YIG resonator. If you could get the frequency higher, so the sweep range is narrower, then mix to the desired freq with a balanced mixer...that would be an easier VCO design. Steve K;9;d;c;i The punctuation is my feeble attempt at spam-bot blocking. "James Fenech" wrote in message ... Hi Roy, thanks for the suggestion. I am considering buying this book. Can I ask how much theory, and how deep does it go? I am an engineer (digital electornics and software background) and actually like some theory to help me understand what I am doing. I already have some "real" test equipment, 50MHz CRO, signal generator, multimeter, etc. So "simple" test equipment may not be too much of an improvement. I've looked over the internet, and some books that I have, but found no real example circuit on wideband VCOs. The only "sort of close enough" circuit I found is at: http://www.newwaveinstruments.com/resources/rf_microwave_resources/sections/oscillator_vco_theory_design_circuit.htm#Voltage%2 0Controled%20Oscillator%20(VCO)%20Circuits The second one down - Colpitts. Are there any such examples in this book? Thanks, James. "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I highly recommend _Experimental Methods in RF Design_, by Hayward, Cambell, and Larkin. It's published by the ARRL and available from them and numerous other sources. Besides theory and a lot of real, practical, tested circuits and projects, it includes simple test equipment you can build yourself. Roy Lewallen, W7EL James Fenech wrote: . . . I have the ARRL handbook (1997 or so) but this doesn't have much in the way of theory. Is there any other reference anyone can recommend? . . . |
#13
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2:1 tuning range with varactor tuning is very doable in the frequency range
he's considering. I've done 3:1 at lower frequencies. No steep hill at all. Joe W3JDR "Steve Nosko" wrote in message ... You're climbing a steep hill here James. It is the % change in frequency that is the problem. Professional spec analysers use a 2 GHz LO with a 2:1 range (to scan 0-2GHz), but I believe that is a magnetically tuned YIG resonator. If you could get the frequency higher, so the sweep range is narrower, then mix to the desired freq with a balanced mixer...that would be an easier VCO design. Steve K;9;d;c;i The punctuation is my feeble attempt at spam-bot blocking. "James Fenech" wrote in message ... Hi Roy, thanks for the suggestion. I am considering buying this book. Can I ask how much theory, and how deep does it go? I am an engineer (digital electornics and software background) and actually like some theory to help me understand what I am doing. I already have some "real" test equipment, 50MHz CRO, signal generator, multimeter, etc. So "simple" test equipment may not be too much of an improvement. I've looked over the internet, and some books that I have, but found no real example circuit on wideband VCOs. The only "sort of close enough" circuit I found is at: http://www.newwaveinstruments.com/resources/rf_microwave_resources/sections/oscillator_vco_theory_design_circuit.htm#Voltage%2 0Controled%20Oscillator%20(VCO)%20Circuits The second one down - Colpitts. Are there any such examples in this book? Thanks, James. "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I highly recommend _Experimental Methods in RF Design_, by Hayward, Cambell, and Larkin. It's published by the ARRL and available from them and numerous other sources. Besides theory and a lot of real, practical, tested circuits and projects, it includes simple test equipment you can build yourself. Roy Lewallen, W7EL James Fenech wrote: . . . I have the ARRL handbook (1997 or so) but this doesn't have much in the way of theory. Is there any other reference anyone can recommend? . . . |
#14
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Thanks Joe,
I wouldn't have thought it would be too difficult. Minicircuits sells parts that have a 2:1 range (not the right range though), and I only want 1.7:1 or so. Interesting idea about downmixing, but I really don't want another mixer and oscillator in this thing. Acording to my pspice results I can get the range, but I'm a little concerned about the high voltage swing on the varactors causing very poor phase noise. James. "W3JDR" wrote in message ... 2:1 tuning range with varactor tuning is very doable in the frequency range he's considering. I've done 3:1 at lower frequencies. No steep hill at all. Joe W3JDR "Steve Nosko" wrote in message ... You're climbing a steep hill here James. It is the % change in frequency that is the problem. Professional spec analysers use a 2 GHz LO with a 2:1 range (to scan 0-2GHz), but I believe that is a magnetically tuned YIG resonator. If you could get the frequency higher, so the sweep range is narrower, then mix to the desired freq with a balanced mixer...that would be an easier VCO design. Steve K;9;d;c;i The punctuation is my feeble attempt at spam-bot blocking. "James Fenech" wrote in message ... Hi Roy, thanks for the suggestion. I am considering buying this book. Can I ask how much theory, and how deep does it go? I am an engineer (digital electornics and software background) and actually like some theory to help me understand what I am doing. I already have some "real" test equipment, 50MHz CRO, signal generator, multimeter, etc. So "simple" test equipment may not be too much of an improvement. I've looked over the internet, and some books that I have, but found no real example circuit on wideband VCOs. The only "sort of close enough" circuit I found is at: http://www.newwaveinstruments.com/resources/rf_microwave_resources/sections/oscillator_vco_theory_design_circuit.htm#Voltage%2 0Controled%20Oscillator%20(VCO)%20Circuits The second one down - Colpitts. Are there any such examples in this book? Thanks, James. "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I highly recommend _Experimental Methods in RF Design_, by Hayward, Cambell, and Larkin. It's published by the ARRL and available from them and numerous other sources. Besides theory and a lot of real, practical, tested circuits and projects, it includes simple test equipment you can build yourself. Roy Lewallen, W7EL James Fenech wrote: . . . I have the ARRL handbook (1997 or so) but this doesn't have much in the way of theory. Is there any other reference anyone can recommend? . . . |
#15
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Thanks Joe,
I wouldn't have thought it would be too difficult. Minicircuits sells parts that have a 2:1 range (not the right range though), and I only want 1.7:1 or so. Interesting idea about downmixing, but I really don't want another mixer and oscillator in this thing. Acording to my pspice results I can get the range, but I'm a little concerned about the high voltage swing on the varactors causing very poor phase noise. James. "W3JDR" wrote in message ... 2:1 tuning range with varactor tuning is very doable in the frequency range he's considering. I've done 3:1 at lower frequencies. No steep hill at all. Joe W3JDR "Steve Nosko" wrote in message ... You're climbing a steep hill here James. It is the % change in frequency that is the problem. Professional spec analysers use a 2 GHz LO with a 2:1 range (to scan 0-2GHz), but I believe that is a magnetically tuned YIG resonator. If you could get the frequency higher, so the sweep range is narrower, then mix to the desired freq with a balanced mixer...that would be an easier VCO design. Steve K;9;d;c;i The punctuation is my feeble attempt at spam-bot blocking. "James Fenech" wrote in message ... Hi Roy, thanks for the suggestion. I am considering buying this book. Can I ask how much theory, and how deep does it go? I am an engineer (digital electornics and software background) and actually like some theory to help me understand what I am doing. I already have some "real" test equipment, 50MHz CRO, signal generator, multimeter, etc. So "simple" test equipment may not be too much of an improvement. I've looked over the internet, and some books that I have, but found no real example circuit on wideband VCOs. The only "sort of close enough" circuit I found is at: http://www.newwaveinstruments.com/resources/rf_microwave_resources/sections/oscillator_vco_theory_design_circuit.htm#Voltage%2 0Controled%20Oscillator%20(VCO)%20Circuits The second one down - Colpitts. Are there any such examples in this book? Thanks, James. "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I highly recommend _Experimental Methods in RF Design_, by Hayward, Cambell, and Larkin. It's published by the ARRL and available from them and numerous other sources. Besides theory and a lot of real, practical, tested circuits and projects, it includes simple test equipment you can build yourself. Roy Lewallen, W7EL James Fenech wrote: . . . I have the ARRL handbook (1997 or so) but this doesn't have much in the way of theory. Is there any other reference anyone can recommend? . . . |
#16
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James
In general, very wide tuning range and very good phase noise are sort of antithetical. If you use the circuit I sent you, the phase noise will be quite good for your simple spectrum analyzer application (unless you're planning to have a very high resolution/very low bandwidth mode). Don't get too hung up on your Spice modeling. It can keep you from trying some things that are known to work. In general, if I can build it faster than I can model it, I'll just go right for building it. I use modeling to get another perspective, but not to get the whole picture. Joe "James Fenech" wrote in message ... Thanks Joe, I wouldn't have thought it would be too difficult. Minicircuits sells parts that have a 2:1 range (not the right range though), and I only want 1.7:1 or so. Interesting idea about downmixing, but I really don't want another mixer and oscillator in this thing. Acording to my pspice results I can get the range, but I'm a little concerned about the high voltage swing on the varactors causing very poor phase noise. James. "W3JDR" wrote in message ... 2:1 tuning range with varactor tuning is very doable in the frequency range he's considering. I've done 3:1 at lower frequencies. No steep hill at all. Joe W3JDR "Steve Nosko" wrote in message ... You're climbing a steep hill here James. It is the % change in frequency that is the problem. Professional spec analysers use a 2 GHz LO with a 2:1 range (to scan 0-2GHz), but I believe that is a magnetically tuned YIG resonator. If you could get the frequency higher, so the sweep range is narrower, then mix to the desired freq with a balanced mixer...that would be an easier VCO design. Steve K;9;d;c;i The punctuation is my feeble attempt at spam-bot blocking. "James Fenech" wrote in message ... Hi Roy, thanks for the suggestion. I am considering buying this book. Can I ask how much theory, and how deep does it go? I am an engineer (digital electornics and software background) and actually like some theory to help me understand what I am doing. I already have some "real" test equipment, 50MHz CRO, signal generator, multimeter, etc. So "simple" test equipment may not be too much of an improvement. I've looked over the internet, and some books that I have, but found no real example circuit on wideband VCOs. The only "sort of close enough" circuit I found is at: http://www.newwaveinstruments.com/resources/rf_microwave_resources/sections/oscillator_vco_theory_design_circuit.htm#Voltage%2 0Controled%20Oscillator%20(VCO)%20Circuits The second one down - Colpitts. Are there any such examples in this book? Thanks, James. "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I highly recommend _Experimental Methods in RF Design_, by Hayward, Cambell, and Larkin. It's published by the ARRL and available from them and numerous other sources. Besides theory and a lot of real, practical, tested circuits and projects, it includes simple test equipment you can build yourself. Roy Lewallen, W7EL James Fenech wrote: . . . I have the ARRL handbook (1997 or so) but this doesn't have much in the way of theory. Is there any other reference anyone can recommend? . . . |
#17
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James
In general, very wide tuning range and very good phase noise are sort of antithetical. If you use the circuit I sent you, the phase noise will be quite good for your simple spectrum analyzer application (unless you're planning to have a very high resolution/very low bandwidth mode). Don't get too hung up on your Spice modeling. It can keep you from trying some things that are known to work. In general, if I can build it faster than I can model it, I'll just go right for building it. I use modeling to get another perspective, but not to get the whole picture. Joe "James Fenech" wrote in message ... Thanks Joe, I wouldn't have thought it would be too difficult. Minicircuits sells parts that have a 2:1 range (not the right range though), and I only want 1.7:1 or so. Interesting idea about downmixing, but I really don't want another mixer and oscillator in this thing. Acording to my pspice results I can get the range, but I'm a little concerned about the high voltage swing on the varactors causing very poor phase noise. James. "W3JDR" wrote in message ... 2:1 tuning range with varactor tuning is very doable in the frequency range he's considering. I've done 3:1 at lower frequencies. No steep hill at all. Joe W3JDR "Steve Nosko" wrote in message ... You're climbing a steep hill here James. It is the % change in frequency that is the problem. Professional spec analysers use a 2 GHz LO with a 2:1 range (to scan 0-2GHz), but I believe that is a magnetically tuned YIG resonator. If you could get the frequency higher, so the sweep range is narrower, then mix to the desired freq with a balanced mixer...that would be an easier VCO design. Steve K;9;d;c;i The punctuation is my feeble attempt at spam-bot blocking. "James Fenech" wrote in message ... Hi Roy, thanks for the suggestion. I am considering buying this book. Can I ask how much theory, and how deep does it go? I am an engineer (digital electornics and software background) and actually like some theory to help me understand what I am doing. I already have some "real" test equipment, 50MHz CRO, signal generator, multimeter, etc. So "simple" test equipment may not be too much of an improvement. I've looked over the internet, and some books that I have, but found no real example circuit on wideband VCOs. The only "sort of close enough" circuit I found is at: http://www.newwaveinstruments.com/resources/rf_microwave_resources/sections/oscillator_vco_theory_design_circuit.htm#Voltage%2 0Controled%20Oscillator%20(VCO)%20Circuits The second one down - Colpitts. Are there any such examples in this book? Thanks, James. "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I highly recommend _Experimental Methods in RF Design_, by Hayward, Cambell, and Larkin. It's published by the ARRL and available from them and numerous other sources. Besides theory and a lot of real, practical, tested circuits and projects, it includes simple test equipment you can build yourself. Roy Lewallen, W7EL James Fenech wrote: . . . I have the ARRL handbook (1997 or so) but this doesn't have much in the way of theory. Is there any other reference anyone can recommend? . . . |
#18
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Seems to me I read a note about W7ZOI starting to build a variation of his
original spectrum analyzer which will cover up to 200 MHz. http://users.easystreet.com/w7zoi/vhfbpf.html He expects to use a mini-circuit VCO. POS-535 VCO from MiniCircuits will sweep from 260 to 460 MHz Given a first IF of 260 MHz, it all works nicely. Personally, I'd be inclined to do something like this, using the minicircuits part, since they tend to be fairly linear tuning MHz/VOLT which simplifies the sweep circuitry a lot. I have built broadband tuning range VCOs before, and I know it can be done, but in a spectrum analyzer, the performance is usually limited by the first VCO so using a good performance VCO makes sense to me. Jim N6BIU |
#19
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Seems to me I read a note about W7ZOI starting to build a variation of his
original spectrum analyzer which will cover up to 200 MHz. http://users.easystreet.com/w7zoi/vhfbpf.html He expects to use a mini-circuit VCO. POS-535 VCO from MiniCircuits will sweep from 260 to 460 MHz Given a first IF of 260 MHz, it all works nicely. Personally, I'd be inclined to do something like this, using the minicircuits part, since they tend to be fairly linear tuning MHz/VOLT which simplifies the sweep circuitry a lot. I have built broadband tuning range VCOs before, and I know it can be done, but in a spectrum analyzer, the performance is usually limited by the first VCO so using a good performance VCO makes sense to me. Jim N6BIU |
#20
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_Experimental Methods_ is oriented toward the advanced amateur, so you
won't find the depth and level of math you would in a college text or a specialized text on one of the many topics covered in that book. However, there's a lot more depth than you'll find in something like the _ARRL Handbook_. Another thing is that the authors are all experienced and professional engineers who've spent years doing RF design, and all know a very great deal about the covered topics. In my opinion, only someone with a very deep and basic understanding of the fundamentals can accurately explain theory in an intuitive and easy to understand way. The authors have that understanding. I have no doubt you'll be very pleased with the book. Re test equipment: how about devices for measuring RF power, impedance, frequency, inductance, capacitance, Q, spectra, noise figure, and crystal characteristics? I don't believe there's an example of a wideband VCO. The authors concentrate a lot on keeping phase noise low, so use other methods to achieve wideband operation than with a wideband VCO. If you're looking for a more theoretical treatment of oscillators and other RF circuits, I recommend Hayward's _Introduction to Radio Frequency Design_, now also published by the ARRL. (You might find a used first edition, published by Wiley as I recall.) After reading the chapter on oscillators, you'll know enough to get a good start at least at designing your own VCO. There are a lot of practical tips and observations about oscillators in _Oscillator Design and Computer Simulation_ by Randall Rhea (Noble publishing, ISBN1-884932-30-4), although in my opinion it doesn't convey as fundamental understanding of oscillator operation as Hayward's books. Roy Lewallen, W7EL James Fenech wrote: Hi Roy, thanks for the suggestion. I am considering buying this book. Can I ask how much theory, and how deep does it go? I am an engineer (digital electornics and software background) and actually like some theory to help me understand what I am doing. I already have some "real" test equipment, 50MHz CRO, signal generator, multimeter, etc. So "simple" test equipment may not be too much of an improvement. I've looked over the internet, and some books that I have, but found no real example circuit on wideband VCOs. The only "sort of close enough" circuit I found is at: http://www.newwaveinstruments.com/resources/rf_microwave_resources/sections/oscillator_vco_theory_design_circuit.htm#Voltage%2 0Controled%20Oscillator%20(VCO)%20Circuits The second one down - Colpitts. Are there any such examples in this book? Thanks, James. "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I highly recommend _Experimental Methods in RF Design_, by Hayward, Cambell, and Larkin. It's published by the ARRL and available from them and numerous other sources. Besides theory and a lot of real, practical, tested circuits and projects, it includes simple test equipment you can build yourself. Roy Lewallen, W7EL James Fenech wrote: . . . I have the ARRL handbook (1997 or so) but this doesn't have much in the way of theory. Is there any other reference anyone can recommend? . . . |
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