Hi

Oscillatek was acquired by K&L in the early 1980’s. K&L was acquired by Dover 
in 
the mid 1980’s. Dover acquired Vectron Labs in the early 1990’s. All data on 
the 
Oscillatek parts is long gone …. even to the person who ran the company ( = me 
) …. 

Simple answer: 

Hook up a power supply and feed the tune input. See what you get. On a part 
that is 
many decades old. That’s going to be far better data than anything from “way 
back when”.

Bob

> On Aug 12, 2020, at 7:01 PM, Peter McCollum <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> Please excuse my remedial question. I am looking for basic information on
> an oscillator module marked as follows:
> Oscillatek 2352
> 10.00 MHz TCVCXO
> 5850-0000-012
>  0.0 Hz at 25C
> SN    DATE
> 42105   8707
> 
> I understand that Oscillatek is now Vectron which is now Microchip.
> It has a 7-pin male connector on the bottom that appears to be a 7-pin
> vacuum tube style.
> I have hand-written notes indicating 12V, 10 mA power; and that pin 7 is a
> "Tune" input. Pins 2, 4, and 5 not identified. Pin 1 is wired to +12V via a
> diode.
> I gather that the "VC" in the description is "Voltage Controlled".
> 
> I'm interested in things like:
> - What is the typical application?
> - What are the characteristics of the VC input?
> 
> Thanks,
> Pete
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