The recent discussion of tweaking up the tune range of an OCXO has reminded me of another of my ongoing projects, and I thought I'd mention some of it here. The varicap diode is near and dear to hearts - whether you know it or not - for tuning RF oscillators and other functions. One of my projects is a complete redo and upgrade of an old-school C-V meter, for looking at varicaps and other junction devices. It's a Princeton Applied Research (PAR) Model 410, from the late 1960s -1970s or so. In its original form, it was for looking at the gate to source or drain capacitance of the newly developed MOSFET technologies, but it's basically a 1 MHz capacitance meter, using lock-in methods to measure C and G, with applied variable DC bias.

I got this unit a while back for cheap, and managed to fix a number of problems (mostly power supply related) and get it working well enough to experiment with it. I never did find any details like manuals or schematics, but it's mostly simple enough to figure out, with plenty of reverse engineering and circuit tracing. Among the first things to go were all the low-speed plotting functions, to be replaced by "fast" 60 Hz sweeps, like in a I-V curve tracer, for display on a scope in X-Y mode. It took a lot of redesign to make it go this fast, and other things to be useful in its new life, but it worked out pretty well.

The really cool part is this puff-o-meter engine, which I would keep no matter what happens to the rest of the unit, but it turned out that I could use the carcass and PS, with mostly new controls up front, and lots of new circuitry

So, it's set up to sweep any device in reverse bias, up to 100V, and display the C from 0.05 pf/div to 200 pF/div on a scope, versus bias voltage, or show static C or G and leakage current on its original built in meter, at manually set DC bias.

Ed

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