Another chip to suggest that I have used is the Texas Instruments 
CDCE913 (and family).  Wide range of input and output frequencies. If 
you have a programmer, it has on-board EEPROM.  Otherwise, it programs 
through I2S.

David N1HAC


On 10/1/18 3:40 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
> Hi
>
> If the device is attaching to a micro controller (as in the original 
> request), feeding it a few
> bits to get it set up may not add any parts at all. No, that’s not a 
> certainty, but it usually
> is a pretty good guess. Most micro’s these days will start up on an internal 
> clock source so
> even the “what to use at time zero” issue is taken care of.
>
> Bob
>
>> On Oct 1, 2018, at 1:24 PM, Richard (Rick) Karlquist <[email protected]> 
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> On 10/1/2018 9:01 AM, ew via time-nuts wrote:
>>> I made a mistake in the previous post we use the ICS 570 with very good 
>>> results in many applications. So it was easy to test. This has to be the 
>>> easiest and lowest cost circuit. Start with an AC14 ST, followed by a 
>>> divide by 5. I used part of a HC390 but a LS 90 will do. Take the 2 MHz 
>>> output feed the input of the 570 and select 16X out comes 32 and 16 MHz. 
>>> Material cost less than $ 5 regulator included.
>>> Bert Kehren
>> The big advantage of the ICS570 vs 99% of the other solutions
>> is that it does not require a microcontroller to baby sit it.
>> For a quick and easy solution, that aspect trumps everything
>> else.
>>
>> At least for me. I took 1 course in Fortran 50 years ago,
>> and that was the extent of my software education.
>> During my whole career, I have too busy being well
>> paid to design hardware, to have any time left over to
>> learn software.  After Fortran was over, there was the Pascal
>> fad, then the C fad, etc, now I guess Python is the latest.
>> Never got involved in any of that.
>>
>> Rick N6RK
>>
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