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A year or so ago I was working on a microwave local oscillator (at
about 2.5 GHz) multiplied up from a crystal oscillator near 40 MHz. The output was found to jump in frequency by tens or hundreds of Hz many times as the LO chain was warming up. I was able to reduce this jumping by replacing all the dipped silver mica capacitors in the crystal oscillator stage with NP0 ceramics. There is still a bit of jumping which may come from some silver micas which remain in the stage following the crystal oscillator. I have just been observing the same sort of frequent jumping behaviour (up to a kHz or so at a time) in another local oscillator (output at about 10.5 GHz, phase locked to a crystal oscillator around 100 MHz). I note that this one also has dipped silver mica caps in the crystal oscillator and I wonder if it too would be improved by replacing them with NP0 ceramics. The capacitors used in both cases are from unknown sources and were probably manufactured in the early 1980's. Has anyone else experienced this behaviour ? Steve (VE3SMA) |
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