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Thread: 100mhz oscillator circuit

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    gray5596 Newbie
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    Default 100mhz oscillator circuit

    Greetings from a new guy. I am looking for a reasonably stable 100mhz oscillator circuit. (Any frequency from 90 to 105mhz would work well.) My application is for a portable spectrum analyzer that is driven by a YIG (and lacks a tracking generator) so at lower frequencies, it drifts a bit. I plan to use this oscillator to generate a marker signal for a reference in the FM range. Any help or alternate ideas would be appreciated.


  2. #2
    crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent
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    I assume you mean megahertz not millihertz.

    Is there some reason not to use an off-the-shelf crystal oscillator module? For example, Digi-Key sells many such units with some costing only a few dollars.

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    gray5596 Newbie
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    Sorry, I didn't proof-read my words very well. You are correct, I meant megahertz. (At 100 millahertz, I'd probably get the attention of an angry whale )

    I'm looking for something simple so the idea of a pre-made crystal oscillator sounds great. However I have a few questions. Wouldn't it be a fairly low level output? In other words, wouldn't I have to take the output from it and use it to drive a transistor to get a strong enough signal for my analyzer? Or were you thinking about driving the analyzer directly instead of transmitting the signal thru the air?

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    crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent
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    Quote Originally Posted by gray5596
    I'm looking for something simple so the idea of a pre-made crystal oscillator sounds great. However I have a few questions. Wouldn't it be a fairly low level output? In other words, wouldn't I have to take the output from it and use it to drive a transistor to get a strong enough signal for my analyzer? Or were you thinking about driving the analyzer directly instead of transmitting the signal thru the air?
    I did think you would be injecting the signal directly. So this is an analyzer with an antenna input?

    One oscillator I looked at from Digi-Key (ECS-3951M/3953M-AU) has a 5V output. Attaching a short wire to the output should give a reasonable signal through the air for short distances, likely enough to be readily observed by the analyzer. Probably would also foul up FM reception at that frequency for a significant distance.
    Last edited by crutschow; 6th May 2008 at 06:15 PM.

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    Boncuk Excellent Boncuk Excellent Boncuk Excellent Boncuk Excellent Boncuk Excellent Boncuk Excellent Boncuk Excellent
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    Best bet is a TCXO. They have an initial accuracy of +/- 1ppm.

    Check at http://www.vectron.com

  6. #6
    crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent crutschow Excellent
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    Quote Originally Posted by Boncuk
    Best bet is a TCXO. They have an initial accuracy of +/- 1ppm.
    TCXOs are good if you need that much stability. But they are more expensive and gray5596 stated he needed a "reasonably stable" oscillator which I interpreted to mean that the stability of a standard crystal oscilllator would suffice.

    gray5596 will need to decide how much stability he needs (or wants to pay for).

  7. #7
    gray5596 Newbie
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    Thanks for the ideas, you pointed me to a much easy solution.

    I was trying to make this too hard by making it transmit thru the air, when all I had to do was take crutschow's advice and use a standard pre-made oscillator and feed this directly to the analyzer.

    I experimented with a couple of different oscillators and it worked quite well. Mission accomplished!

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