Re: [time-nuts] Homebrew Rubidium oscillator, jitter and other tales :-)

2010-08-07 Thread Richard (Rick) Karlquist

ulm...@vaxman.de wrote:


blinked. This problem was eventually solved by driving the LED with a discrete
transistor instead of a free 74AC14 gate and decoupling this driver with an
RC-combination.


CMOS logic gates have a totem pole output that is famous for overlap 
where both transistors on briefly turned on at the same time, resulting 
in large current spike from the power supply.  It would be interesting
to see if this was the problem, or whether it was the antenna 
connected to the output.


Rick N6RK

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Re: [time-nuts] Homebrew Rubidium oscillator, jitter and other tales :-)

2010-08-07 Thread Magnus Danielson

On 08/07/2010 07:31 PM, Richard (Rick) Karlquist wrote:

ulm...@vaxman.de wrote:


blinked. This problem was eventually solved by driving the LED with a
discrete
transistor instead of a free 74AC14 gate and decoupling this driver
with an
RC-combination.


CMOS logic gates have a totem pole output that is famous for overlap
where both transistors on briefly turned on at the same time, resulting
in large current spike from the power supply. It would be interesting
to see if this was the problem, or whether it was the antenna
connected to the output.


Also depends on the load. If you have enough capacitive load, current 
switch-over occurs when both transistors is driving. But with a load 
such as a LED, I would suspect it would be too big current load to be 
handled that way.


Separate transistor is much better.

Cheers,
Magnus

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