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#11
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"JLB" ) writes:
Can't quite tell from your description what your circuit is, but if I recall correctly back when i was doing hardware design a crystal oscillator using logic gates required two gates. I used to use three---two for the oscillator and the third for a buffer. The two inverters where tied together with a capacitor between them. Then the crystal was placed from the input of the first gate to the output of the second. The output of the second also went to the buffer stage. !-----------------crystal------------| Like this: - gate one---capacitor---gate two---gate three---circuit output As I recall, there was also a resistor from the input of gate one to ground, and from the output of gate two to ground. I do not recall the capacitor or resistor values, but when properly built this circuit never failed to oscillate with any crystal within the range of the gates (fundamental mode only). Jim N8EE That was a standard oscillator with TTL. I used a 7400, and 470ohm resistors from input to output of each gate. No coupling capacitor was needed, though there was a low value cap in series with the crystal for load capacitance. (The resistors linearized the gates.) There were obviously variations on the theme, and your suggestion was one of them. And as you say, these tended to oscillate with most crystals. I had one built up as a module, so I'd have a general purpose oscillator read, to check crystals or as a signal source. But, for some reason, when they moved to CMOS oscillators, the norm became one gate, with a feedback resistor and a pair of capacitors, one from input to ground, and the other from output to ground. Michael VE2BVW "PaoloC" wrote in message ... Hi. I have spent part of the weekend trying to resonate al old CB XTAL at its fundamental frequency. The XTAL is labelled 27.125 MHz, with a fundamental of about 9.041 MHz, which falls into 18m HAM band when multiplied by two. I assume 27MHz XTALs are 3rd overtone. Since the circuitry is/will be digital, the oscillator is one gate of a 74HC14. 470ohm resistor from gate output to the parallel of 1Mohm//XTAL. 10pF and 33pF (from the junkbox) capacitors to ground on each side of the XTAL. No oscillation (I have no oscilloscope, I use my HF receiver to troubleshoot oscillators at known frequencies). If I replace the XTAL with a 10.000 MHz rock the oscillation is loud and clear. I have never built something with an overtone XTAL. I know that I need an output resonating circuit if I want to extract the 3rd harmonic. Do I need the same if I want the fundamental? Are overtone XTALs "harder" to resonate? Are those old CB XTALs 3rd overtone? I assume my 27MHz XTAL works. :-) Thanks in advance for all suggestions, Paolo IK1ZYW |
#12
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![]() "Michael Black" wrote in message ... But, for some reason, when they moved to CMOS oscillators, the norm became one gate, with a feedback resistor and a pair of capacitors, one from input to ground, and the other from output to ground. Oh, yes. That rang a bell. CMOS logic is easier to get to work as an analog device than TTL. At least for the good ol' RCA 4000 series. I am not familiar with the newer 74HC00 series to judge its performance. I would suspect that the 'bias' resistors would have to be carefully chosen and that it would be sensitive to both the crystal frequency and the ambient temperature. When I was doing circuit desgin everyone most were still using TTL. The 74LS00 series was the hot item at the time. Just from a logical viewpoint (pun not intended, by the way) I still think he should try using two gates in a ring circuit. Jim N8EE |
#13
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![]() "Michael Black" wrote in message ... But, for some reason, when they moved to CMOS oscillators, the norm became one gate, with a feedback resistor and a pair of capacitors, one from input to ground, and the other from output to ground. Oh, yes. That rang a bell. CMOS logic is easier to get to work as an analog device than TTL. At least for the good ol' RCA 4000 series. I am not familiar with the newer 74HC00 series to judge its performance. I would suspect that the 'bias' resistors would have to be carefully chosen and that it would be sensitive to both the crystal frequency and the ambient temperature. When I was doing circuit desgin everyone most were still using TTL. The 74LS00 series was the hot item at the time. Just from a logical viewpoint (pun not intended, by the way) I still think he should try using two gates in a ring circuit. Jim N8EE |
#14
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![]() "Michael Black" wrote in message ... PaoloC ) writes: Hi. I have spent part of the weekend trying to resonate al old CB XTAL at its fundamental frequency. The XTAL is labelled 27.125 MHz, with a fundamental of about 9.041 MHz, which falls into 18m HAM band when multiplied by two. I assume 27MHz XTALs are 3rd overtone.... Could the crystal be a receive crystal? CB crystals tended to show the channel number or the frequency of the channel, and so if you simply looked at the marked frequency, it would not tell you if it's for transmit or receive. Though the ones I've seen did mark them with "R" or "T". The point is that if it's a receive crystal, it wouldn't be 1/3 of 27.125 but 27.125-IF and then divided by three. IFs were frequently 455KHz I have used fundamental crystals on their overtones and overtone crystals on the fundamental. They are not exactly 1/3 or 1/5 ratio due to parasitics in the crystal. All crystals have the fund and OT responses, but the responses are optimized for the intended use - by changing some of the construction. (I'm talking AT cuts) Overtone crystals *tend* to be used in the SERIES resonant mode, though not always. Fundamental crystals tend to be used mostly in the parallel resonant mode. This will also cause additinal frequency error when using the marked frequency. The parallel freq is higher than the series (if I recall correctly) If I recall, the two gate oscillator is a series resonant oscillator and the one gate is parallel. I would use a transistor Colpits oscillator myself. The digital gate oscillators can run the crystal at a higher drive than it should causing more crystal heating than desired (more drift w/time). If you are going to use a OT xtal as a fund., I'd pick a parallel type osc like the Colpits (I think it has another name when it has a crystal rather than a coil). I never did like the digital gate oscillators. They tend to be a *bruit force* oscillator. Because of the Rs of the crystal, crystals of some frequencies are easier to over drive than others. Unfortunately, I don't remember which is which. The fact that your 10mMHz xtal works is a good start. The other one probably will, but since it was made for the third OT, there may be enough difference to keep it from oscillating without some circuit change. If you have no scope, measure the current drain. There may be a change when the xtal is inserted if it is oscillating. Also, you could try measuring some voltage through a large resistor or choke to see changes when the xtal is inserted. -- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. |
#15
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![]() "Michael Black" wrote in message ... PaoloC ) writes: Hi. I have spent part of the weekend trying to resonate al old CB XTAL at its fundamental frequency. The XTAL is labelled 27.125 MHz, with a fundamental of about 9.041 MHz, which falls into 18m HAM band when multiplied by two. I assume 27MHz XTALs are 3rd overtone.... Could the crystal be a receive crystal? CB crystals tended to show the channel number or the frequency of the channel, and so if you simply looked at the marked frequency, it would not tell you if it's for transmit or receive. Though the ones I've seen did mark them with "R" or "T". The point is that if it's a receive crystal, it wouldn't be 1/3 of 27.125 but 27.125-IF and then divided by three. IFs were frequently 455KHz I have used fundamental crystals on their overtones and overtone crystals on the fundamental. They are not exactly 1/3 or 1/5 ratio due to parasitics in the crystal. All crystals have the fund and OT responses, but the responses are optimized for the intended use - by changing some of the construction. (I'm talking AT cuts) Overtone crystals *tend* to be used in the SERIES resonant mode, though not always. Fundamental crystals tend to be used mostly in the parallel resonant mode. This will also cause additinal frequency error when using the marked frequency. The parallel freq is higher than the series (if I recall correctly) If I recall, the two gate oscillator is a series resonant oscillator and the one gate is parallel. I would use a transistor Colpits oscillator myself. The digital gate oscillators can run the crystal at a higher drive than it should causing more crystal heating than desired (more drift w/time). If you are going to use a OT xtal as a fund., I'd pick a parallel type osc like the Colpits (I think it has another name when it has a crystal rather than a coil). I never did like the digital gate oscillators. They tend to be a *bruit force* oscillator. Because of the Rs of the crystal, crystals of some frequencies are easier to over drive than others. Unfortunately, I don't remember which is which. The fact that your 10mMHz xtal works is a good start. The other one probably will, but since it was made for the third OT, there may be enough difference to keep it from oscillating without some circuit change. If you have no scope, measure the current drain. There may be a change when the xtal is inserted if it is oscillating. Also, you could try measuring some voltage through a large resistor or choke to see changes when the xtal is inserted. -- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. |
#16
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Hi,
thanks to all those who replied and discussed this topic, providing me with a lot of good suggestions. I will try a different ex-CB rock, just in case the one I picked is broken. I actually tried a "Colpitts" oscillator with it and had no success either. 73, Paolo IK1ZYW |
#17
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Hi,
thanks to all those who replied and discussed this topic, providing me with a lot of good suggestions. I will try a different ex-CB rock, just in case the one I picked is broken. I actually tried a "Colpitts" oscillator with it and had no success either. 73, Paolo IK1ZYW |
#18
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Get something working with a good crystal first.
A Google search (Colpitts Crystal oscillator circuits) turned up lots of gate oscillators. This has the type of transistor oscillators I am used to using: http://hem.passagen.se/communication/txo.html There are many other references at: http://users.telenet.be/educypedia/e...osciltypes.htm I don't like this circuit: http://www.electronics-tutorials.com...scillators.htm |
#19
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Get something working with a good crystal first.
A Google search (Colpitts Crystal oscillator circuits) turned up lots of gate oscillators. This has the type of transistor oscillators I am used to using: http://hem.passagen.se/communication/txo.html There are many other references at: http://users.telenet.be/educypedia/e...osciltypes.htm I don't like this circuit: http://www.electronics-tutorials.com...scillators.htm |
#20
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![]() I dunn-o. I had great success with this cricuit. It's used in all the older Motorola channel elements. Just about any rock will fly at the fundamental unless its really bad. You can play with the ratio of the two feedback caps (Base-to-emitter and emitter-to-ground) Base-to-emitter cap decrease to get more feedback. I even modeled one of these on P-Spice. Really neat to see it oscillate. like Figure 7: http://www.northcountryradio.com/PDFs/column007.pdf -- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. "Steve Nosko" wrote in message ... Get something working with a good crystal first. A Google search (Colpitts Crystal oscillator circuits) turned up lots of gate oscillators. This has the type of transistor oscillators I am used to using: http://hem.passagen.se/communication/txo.html There are many other references at: http://users.telenet.be/educypedia/e...osciltypes.htm I don't like this circuit: http://www.electronics-tutorials.com...scillators.htm |
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