Hi

The board is pretty non-critical. It’s 90% audio. The biggest hassle is a power 
supply. 
You would *like* a fairly high voltage, at least if you are driving a spectrum 
analyzer. That
may not be quite the case with a sound card. It depends a *lot* which one you 
are running. 
Something like a QA401:

https://www.quantasylum.com/content/Products/QA401.aspx

Would make a good target device. It’s based on the AKM 5397 So might some Janus 
boards. 
They are based on the earlier(?) AKM 5394. The QA401 has the advantage of a 
nice box
and full USB isolation (ground loops are a pain). It also has drivers and all 
the OS hooks. 
The Janus is a bit more “DIY” with no drivers or interface (let alone 
isolation). The Janus is
 < 1/4 the price. 

The high voltage (+/- 18V linear regulated)  supply approach makes a lot of 
sense with the QA401. 
It probably does not make as much sense with the Janus. Switching regulators of 
any sort are
something I would strongly recommend against in a system like this that is 
trying to measure
noise floor at audio ….

The schematic changes a bit depending on what the target is. I can draw it up 
if there is a 
consensus on the target. One example: If the “sound card” is DC coupled, you 
can use it to
indicate (and check) quadrature. If it’s an AC device, you need some sort of 
isolated output for
another indicator. 

Bob


> On Mar 24, 2016, at 1:31 PM, John Ackermann N8UR <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I'd be willing to assist with board layout if someone wanted to make this 
> into a real project (e.g., fully developed schematic).  TAPR might be talked 
> into supplying at least bare boards; we'd have to get a sense of demand 
> before committing to a full kit or assembled unit.
> 
> John
> ----
> On 3/24/2016 9:04 AM, jimlux wrote:
>> More like $40 in parts, without a board, etc.
>> The RPD-1 is $20.70
>> LT1678/LT1679 is a nice low noise opamp that does rail to rail and is
>> about $5
>> etc
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On 3/24/16 4:42 AM, Bob Camp wrote:
>>> Hi
>>> 
>>> Pretty simple:
>>> 
>>> Double balanced mixer, RPD-1 is one option, there are others.
>>> 
>>> Fairly simple L/C lowpass between the mixer and an op-amp.
>>> 
>>> 20 db positive (non-inverting) op-amp amplifier string after the mixer
>>> 
>>> Output of the string goes to the sound card. Use a good (dual / quad)
>>> audio op amp
>>> 
>>> Quadrature amp picks off the output of the first op amp stage, switch
>>> and resistors to set gain, pot to set op point.
>>> 
>>> ====
>>> 
>>> So what you have is an old style quadrature phase noise amp and “PLL”.
>>> More or less a very junior version
>>> of the 3048 test box. Like any setup of this sort, you check two
>>> similar oscillators. They run in quadrature and
>>> you do a few “measure this with switch in position A” sort of things
>>> to set things up each time.
>>> 
>>> Nothing exotic.
>>> 
>>> Bob
>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Any documentation on this $40 phase noise test set?
>>>> 
>>>> Rick N6RK
>>> 
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