Hey Marcus,

This may not be what you are looking for, but these are awesome. They may
be going to space soon :)
http://www.newedges2.com/products/SAX239-R2_Datasheet_February-27th-2018.pdf

On Sun, May 20, 2018 at 10:13 PM li...@lazygranch.com <li...@lazygranch.com>
wrote:

> I used to work at Maxim, but my dealings with those RF guys dealt more
> with coffee and the quality thereof.
>
> I looked at the Maxim chip. The filter is relatively steep but not
> complex. Looks like two or three poles maximum. I don't know
> specifically about that chip, but that group had SiGe technology, so
> I'm leaning towards variable transconductance to do the tuning.
>
> You quickly learn just how bad google is at doing a search for this
> technology. The buzz phrase you need is continuous time, so I suggest
> "variable continuous time baseband filter". Sadly OTA gets links to
> "over the air." (And yet, they claim artificial intelligence will take
> over the world.)
>
> The thing to note in any highly integrated analog chip is that you
> don't see the sausage being made. Once you have a system on a chip, the
> metric is the system performance, not the performance per se of any
> individual block. So those filters may not be as great as you think.
> Note the Maxim part shows a tempco on the corner frequency, which could
> imply variable transconductance. One you have bipolar elements in the
> process, variable transconductance is just a matter of tail current.
> (SCF performance was relatively temperature independent.)
>
> Getting back to seeing the sausage, take the old analog modem market.
> Initially the SCF tech was used to make the official Bell 212 filters.
> Once the modem was fully integrated, the on-board filters were
> simplified for a number of really good engineering reasons, not just
> cost. One was the harmonic distortion of the band split filters. The
> harmonics of the in-band signal were far greater than the out-band
> signal that you were trying to reduce.
>
> Getting back to these baseband filters, if you use a ladder design, the
> filter is relatively immune to component error, well as opposed
> (contrasted) to a chain of biquads. If you go full differential, the
> variable transconductance amp are reasonably linear. But probably they
> limit the number of poles for the same harmonic distortion problem.
> Filters should subtract, not add.
>
> Most of the transconductance based filter designs probably are
> derivatives of integrated video filters. Plenty of papers online for
> those designs.
>
> If your goal is to roll together your own filter, TI has app notes on
> how to make analog tracking filters.
>
>  On Sun, 20 May 2018 21:19:47
> -0400 "Marcus D. Leech" <mle...@ripnet.com> wrote:
>
> > On 05/20/2018 09:13 PM, li...@lazygranch.com wrote:
> > >
> > > Can you be more specific about the corner frequency?
> > Corner frequencies step-tunable from perhaps 20Mhz down to perhaps
> > 2MHz.
> >
> > Many chips, like the R820T2, the MAX2112, and the higher-integration
> > devices like the AD9361 and LMS7002M have
> >    programmable analog low-pass corner frequencies, for bandwidth
> > tailoring of the complex baseband.
> >
> > Just not sure how its done. The chips have very low external parts
> > count, so whatever it is, it's got to be done
> >    internally...
> >
> >
> > >
> > > Cell phones use chips that have switchable banks of capacitors for
> > > antenna tuning. st.com IIRC is a source.
> > >
> > > I used to design switched capacitor filter chips in the 80/90s. The
> > > technology was killed by oversampled converters and DSP. The SCF
> > > players went into continuous time video filters using
> > > transconductance amps and such.
> > >
> > >
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-- 
Very Respectfully,

Dan CaJacob
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