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Showing papers on "Crystal oven published in 1965"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a two-transistor series-resonance oscillator circuit is described, in which two point-contact diodes in parallel provide amplitude limitation and no transformer is required.
Abstract: The paper describes in detail a two-transistor series-resonance oscillator circuit, in which two point-contact diodes in parallel provide amplitude limitation. No transformer is required. The particular ATcut crystal used has aQ-value of just over 250 000, and the oscillator frequency increases by approximately 1.5 parts in 108per volt increase in the 10 V d.c. supply. By adding a variable-capacitance diode, this variation may be reduced severalfold. The crystal dissipation is less than 1 ?W, giving a low rate of frequency drift due to crystal ageing. The paper also discusses the relative properties of various well-known oscillator circuits, and gives tables of useful design formulae. One conclusion is that a simple one-transistor Pierce oscillator is capable, when correctly designed, of a much better performance than that usually associated with valve versions of the circuit. Satisfactory operation at a crystal dissipation of about a microwatt is quite feasible without employing additional circuits for amplitude control. An unusual crystal equivalent circuit is derived for use particularly in parallel-resonance oscillators, and this leads directly to a simple alternative explanation of the Marconi FMQ system for frequency modulating a crystal oscillator.

13 citations








Patent
18 Oct 1965

1 citations


Patent
John C. Freeborn1
02 Mar 1965

1 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a 10-to-1 frequency range for RC oscillators based on two active phase shifters of the all-pass type was shown to be tunable over a 10 to 1 frequency range by varying a single resistance.
Abstract: RC oscillators based on two active phase shifters of the all-pass type prove to be tunable over a 10-to-1 frequency range by varying a single resistance. Harmonic distortion can be less than 1 percent over this range. Analysis is made of the variation of Q with tuning and the dependence of phase shift on detailed circuit parameters. Oscillators of this type can be used in telemetry to generate a subcarrier frequency which is a measure of transducer resistance. With temperature compensation, oscillator frequency stability is sufficient to permit the measurement of temperature to ±0.1°C over the range -5°C to 40°C using a thermistor sensor.