Double balanced diode ring mixers love a square wave LO. Transition through the 
diode knee is faster making less distortion. fc

KD5NWA <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:  You are thinking in terms of analog mixers, 
Digital QSD mixers are a 
whole other world. QSD mixers have to have a square wave clock, and 
function way better than a analog mixer if given a low phase noise 
"digital" clock. If they are given an analog sine wave for a clock, 
you would have to turn that back into a digital signal which can 
introduce jitter, so when possible it's best to keep the clock 
digital as much as possible. In a well designed QSD system a clock 
divider will improve the phase noise figures not make it worse.


Food for thought.


At 04:03 PM 4/8/2006, you wrote:
>An addendum to my info:
>
> From this paper, I gave You the internet-adress, You can clearly see
>and take some consequences for receiver constructing.
>
>1.1. If one has an oscillator with phase-noise, You not only mix the
>oscillator not only with the incoming frequency, but also with the
>phase-noise of the oscilltor. It is something like a synchronous
>mixing with a lot of frequencies and a lot of mixing products. The
>less the bandwidth of the phase-noise the better for quality of mixing
>result.
>
>1.2. At mixing You mix a strong signal (the oscillator-signal) with a
>very little one, the incoming signal. Partly You have to filter the
>product.
>
>1.3. You should avoid all solutions with phase noise inclusive
>solutions with ic-dividers.
>
>1.4. The better the signal of the mixing process, the better the
>result. Because of that, to gain ultimate quality, You should forget a
>lot of solutions and change to a dds-circuit with a very high
>working-frequency. All other solutions have a lack of quality, to
>reach ultimate success.
>
>1.5. The alternative could be a quartz-osciallator, but one is not
>able to change the frequency in a wider range.
>
>1.6. My "feeling is" even concepts with I,Q-solutions could be better,
>if a fast dds-circuit is used.
>
>1.7. Having a rectangular signal meens a lot of filtering.... and a
>lot of useless noise.
>
>One can see, that using a fast dds-circuit is at the moment even for
>traditional receveiver concepts in let me say AM, SSB and other
>modulation-types is "state of the art" and You miss-use time and
>effort for other versions.
>
>I will look for answers coming. In the meantime, I will work with my DRT1.
>
>An incoming signal is always not a digital one even, if its
>constructed digital by modulation as DRM.
>
>Wolfgang
>
>--- In [email protected], "Wolfgang Hartmann"
><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Hallo to all, especially to Dan.
> >
> > Here is an email adress, wher You can find some informations in german
> > language.
> >
> > http://www.elexs.de/clock3.htm
> >
> > You see the phase-noise and the noise carpet of several designs.
> >
> > They have a lot more on DRM, Elektor-receiver.
> >
> > Wolfgang
> >
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>


Cecil Bayona
KD5NWA
www.qrpradio.com

"Windows the worlds most successful software virus" 



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