Thanks Bruce. This is the kind of info I was looking for. I'll have to
study your schematics. The purpose of much of it isn't immediately
obvious. :-)
Ed
Bruce Griffiths wrote:
Ed Palmer wrote:
I have a late-model 105B Oscillator that's equipped with a
10811-60109 oscillator. It seems a shame to have that nice 10 MHz
source without having access to it. I was thinking of adding a
buffer amp and bringing out the 10 MHz signal. It shouldn't be too
hard, but before I reinvent the wheel, has anyone done this and do
you have any suggestions or advice?
Thanks,
Ed
Ed
Amplifiers like those shown:
http://www.ko4bb.com/~bruce/OCXOBufferAmplifiers.html
<http://www.ko4bb.com/%7Ebruce/OCXOBufferAmplifiers.html>
work well.
The gain is determined by the transformer turns ratio and the emitter
series resistor value is chosen to set the output impedance to 50 ohms.
RF amplifier transistors other than the 2N3904 can be used, my
breadboard version uses an 2N5943.
Reverse isolation is about 40dB at 10MHz. If you need more isolation
just cascade 2 or 3 such amplifiers.
However some attentiaon to the supply decoupling is required to ensure
that coupling via the supply doesn't degrade the reverse isolation.
In your case a nominal gain of 3dB or so should suffice.
If you need it +27dBm output is possible with an appropriate RF
transistor.
Bruce
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