Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-30 Thread Peter Vince
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Only IEEE members can access documents in their online library :-( 
Would the documents listed by Enrico be available in any of the FTP 
sites run by group members, by any chance?  Pretty please?  :-)

Peter


>Folks,
>deep in my database, there is this reference
>
>R.\ C.\ Harrison,
>``Theory of regenerative frequency dividers using double balanced mixers''
>{\em IEEE Trans.\ on Microwawe Theory and Technology},
>MTT-S Symp.\ Digest vol.\ 1, June 1989, pp.\ 459--462.
>
>There, you can find some issues about the filter.
>
>Keep the group delay small, otherwise the divider may
>enter in chaotic regime.
>
>A short description on where chaos comes from is found in
>
>G.\ Immovilli, G.\ Mantovani
>``Analysis of the Miller Frequency divider by two in view of
>applications to wideband FM signals''
>{\em Alta Frequenza}
>vol.\ 17 no.\ 11, November 1973, pp.\ 313--323.
>
>
>Very best to all
>
>Enrico

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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread John Miles
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> At drive levels below saturation, the loss of a mixer depends on the LO
> signal level.
> Consequently the feedback loop gain of a regenerative divider depends on
> the input signal level.
> Hence one would expect there to be a well defined threshold at which the
> lop gain is sufficient for regeneration to occur.

Yep.  The theory makes perfect sense, but it's still interesting to watch
the f/2 signal appear from nowhere like that.  You expect behavior like that
when you're playing with tunnel diodes or other unusual parts, but not with
an ordinary mixer and filter.

Even a regenerative receiver gives some warning when it's about to break
into oscillation...

-- john, KE5FX


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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread Bruce Griffiths
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John Miles wrote:
>> Am I missing something here?
>>
>> I always thought mixers were non linear by definition, and
>> relying on that
>> non linearity to function:-)
>> 
>
> Sure, a mixer is nonlinear with respect to the multiplicative function it
> applies to its two inputs to obtain the desired output.  It should, however,
> behave linearly with respect to multiple frequency components that may be
> present at any *one* input.  You don't want it to modify either input
> signal, just multiply them together.
>
> Think of a mixer with a perfect sine wave at its RF input and a square wave
> at its LO input.  It's nonlinear with respect to the switching action caused
> by the LO signal, but it had better be linear with respect to how it handles
> the sine wave being switched on and off.  If it distorts the sine wave
> input, it will generate harmonics that you probably didn't want.  And if you
> apply two or more tones to the mixer's input at once, you want only those
> same tones coming out, with the usual +/- translation by the LO frequency.
> To the extent that the mixer allows the RF input tones to interact or
> multiply with each other, it's nonlinear.
>
> This wasn't such a big deal in the old days when your radio had a high-Q
> tuned circuit in front of its first mixer, but modern designs work by
> shovelling a large portion of the spectrum into the mixer at once.
> Nonlinearity is a bad thing in that case.
>
> -- john, KE5FX
>
>   
John

At drive levels below saturation, the loss of a mixer depends on the LO
signal level.
Consequently the feedback loop gain of a regenerative divider depends on
the input signal level.
Hence one would expect there to be a well defined threshold at which the
lop gain is sufficient for regeneration to occur.

Bruce

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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread John Miles
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> Am I missing something here?
>
> I always thought mixers were non linear by definition, and
> relying on that
> non linearity to function:-)

Sure, a mixer is nonlinear with respect to the multiplicative function it
applies to its two inputs to obtain the desired output.  It should, however,
behave linearly with respect to multiple frequency components that may be
present at any *one* input.  You don't want it to modify either input
signal, just multiply them together.

Think of a mixer with a perfect sine wave at its RF input and a square wave
at its LO input.  It's nonlinear with respect to the switching action caused
by the LO signal, but it had better be linear with respect to how it handles
the sine wave being switched on and off.  If it distorts the sine wave
input, it will generate harmonics that you probably didn't want.  And if you
apply two or more tones to the mixer's input at once, you want only those
same tones coming out, with the usual +/- translation by the LO frequency.
To the extent that the mixer allows the RF input tones to interact or
multiply with each other, it's nonlinear.

This wasn't such a big deal in the old days when your radio had a high-Q
tuned circuit in front of its first mixer, but modern designs work by
shovelling a large portion of the spectrum into the mixer at once.
Nonlinearity is a bad thing in that case.

-- john, KE5FX


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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread Didier Juges
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They are non-linear when considering the LO port, and we try to make them
linear considering the RF and IF ports, that's what makes them hard to do
:-)

Didier KO4BB 

> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Saturday, September 29, 2007 5:39 PM
> To: time-nuts@febo.com
> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions
> 
> In a message dated 29/09/2007 23:28:23 GMT Daylight Time, 
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> writes:
> 
> Yep, but  usually they're not quite _that_ nonlinear. :)  I'm 
> used to thinking  of mixers as linear devices, from the 
> IMD/IP3 perspective.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Am I missing something here?
>  
> I always thought mixers were non linear by definition, and 
> relying on that non linearity to function:-)
>  
> regards
>  
> Nigel
> GM8PZR
>  
>  
> 
> 
> 
>
> ___
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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread GandalfG8
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In a message dated 29/09/2007 23:28:23 GMT Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
writes:

Yep, but  usually they're not quite _that_ nonlinear. :)  I'm used to
thinking  of mixers as linear devices, from the IMD/IP3 perspective.




Am I missing something here?
 
I always thought mixers were non linear by definition, and relying on that  
non linearity to function:-)
 
regards
 
Nigel
GM8PZR
 
 



   
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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread John Miles
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Yep, but usually they're not quite _that_ nonlinear. :)  I'm used to
thinking of mixers as linear devices, from the IMD/IP3 perspective.

I'll build up the 4:1 divider from the Gupta paper as soon as I have time,
and see how it works...

-- john, KE5FX

> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Behalf Of Bruce Griffiths
> Sent: Saturday, September 29, 2007 2:56 PM
> To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions
>
>
> ); SAEximRunCond expanded to false
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>
> John Miles wrote:
> >> Did you experience the start of oscillation also as you went from
> >> +3 dBm to
> >> +4 dBm? The impulse may be part of getting the oscillation running.
> >>
> >
> > No; nothing happens until the +4.8 dBm to +4.9 dBm transition.
> There is no
> > hysteresis at all; the output vanishes upon falling back to
> +4.8.  It's an
> > interesting effect, to see such a pronounced on-off transition
> arising from
> > a few basic linear components!
> >
> > -- john, KE5FX
> >
> >
> John
>
> However the regenerative loop includes a mixer which itself is
> inherently nonlinear.
>
> Bruce
>


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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread Bruce Griffiths
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John Miles wrote:
>> Did you experience the start of oscillation also as you went from
>> +3 dBm to
>> +4 dBm? The impulse may be part of getting the oscillation running.
>> 
>
> No; nothing happens until the +4.8 dBm to +4.9 dBm transition.  There is no
> hysteresis at all; the output vanishes upon falling back to +4.8.  It's an
> interesting effect, to see such a pronounced on-off transition arising from
> a few basic linear components!
>
> -- john, KE5FX
>
>   
John

However the regenerative loop includes a mixer which itself is
inherently nonlinear.

Bruce

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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread John Miles
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> Did you experience the start of oscillation also as you went from
> +3 dBm to
> +4 dBm? The impulse may be part of getting the oscillation running.

No; nothing happens until the +4.8 dBm to +4.9 dBm transition.  There is no
hysteresis at all; the output vanishes upon falling back to +4.8.  It's an
interesting effect, to see such a pronounced on-off transition arising from
a few basic linear components!

-- john, KE5FX



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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread Magnus Danielson
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From: Enrico Rubiola <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions
Date: Sat, 29 Sep 2007 16:55:49 +0200
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Dear Enrico,

> I worked on low-noise regenerative dividers long time ago.
> See my home page http://rubiola.org , click on "more journal articles"
> 
> 22. E. Rubiola, M. Olivier, J. Groslambert, Phase noise in the  
> regenerative frequency dividers (PDF, 670 kB),
> IEEE Transact. Instrum. Meas. vol.41 no.3 pp.353-360, June 1992. ©IEEE.

For convenience:
http://www.femto-st.fr/~rubiola/journal-articles/rubiola1992im-regenerative-divider-noise.pdf

> Notice that you can divide by 4 with a single divider,
> using the 3rd harmonics internally generated by the double balanced  
> mixer.
> Dividing 80 MHz, you feed a 20 MHz back to the mixer.
> A 60 MHz signal is generated by the mixer.
> 80 MHz - 60 MHz = 20 MHz, here you go.

Which is what the NIST articles explicitly exercises. They create a double-
frequency oscillation loop having 1/N and (N-1)/N times the input frequency.
A very quick introduction is available in
http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1800.pdf

Care to comment on that strategy Enrico?

It should be noted that both the 1/N and (N-1)/N frequencies is actually
equally available, just that usually the (N-1)/N variant is filtered out.
You could also acheive 3/4, 4/5, 5/6, 7/8 etc. divisions.

Similarly, both frequencies could be output and also their difference could be
included by addition of a mixer (and isolational amps) resulting in an (N-2)/N
output. For the 1/4 case you could thus get 1/2 as a side-effect.

Naturally, for higher N values would the (N-1)/N be close to the (N+1)/N which
results from the 1/N addition with the input frequency.

The same basic strategy could also be used get values beyond the input
frequency if we choose to use the sum frequency rather than the difference
frequency for the high frequency, i.e. by choosing (N+1)/N over (N-1)/N.
It would result in the same synchronous regenerate interlocked system.
It would allow for 3/2, 4/3, 5/4, 6/5, 7/6, 8/7, 9/8 ratios.

A similarly post-processing would only be meaningfull for the sum-products of
the two outputs, thus resulting in (N+2)/N ratios, giving 4/2 (2/1 = 2), 5/3,
6/4 (3/2 = 1,5), 7/5 (1,4), 8/6 (4/3), 9/7, 10/8 (5/4 = 1,25).

In all these, the 1/2 frequency is notched out from the system. If it where to
be included, a trinary oscillation scheme could be used where the 1/2 frequency
support itself through the input frequency and the lower and upper frequencies
would interlock around the 1/2 frequency rather than the input frequency.
This would be equalent to having an 1/2 frequency divider followed by a 1/N
divider. Could be an interesting solution when more compact solutions is
needed.

> Another issue is the correction of the phase noise of a digital divider
> using a double-balanced mixer.
> Read this *smart* article
> 
> D. Huffman, Extremely low noise frequency divider,
> Microwave Journal November 1985, pp. 209--210

Isn't this the same as the Richard Karlquists

http://www.karlquist.com/FCS95.pdf

Cheers,
Magnus

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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread Enrico Rubiola
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Folks,
deep in my database, there is this reference

R.\ C.\ Harrison,
``Theory of regenerative frequency dividers using double balanced  
mixers''
{\em IEEE Trans.\ on Microwawe Theory and Technology},
MTT-S Symp.\ Digest vol.\ 1, June 1989, pp.\ 459--462.

There, you can find some issues about the filter.

Keep the group delay small, otherwise the divider may
enter in chaotic regime.

A short description on where chaos comes from is found in

G.\ Immovilli, G.\ Mantovani
``Analysis of the Miller Frequency divider by two in view of  
applications to
wideband FM signals''
{\em Alta Frequenza}
vol.\ 17 no.\ 11, November 1973, pp.\ 313--323.


Very best to all

Enrico



Enrico Rubiola
professor of electronics

web:http://rubiola.org
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

FEMTO-ST Institute
32 av. de l'Observatoire
25044 Besancon, FRANCE
voice:  +33(0)381.853940 (E.Rubiola)
voice:  +33(0)381.853999 (switchboard)
fax:+33(0)381.853998


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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread Enrico Rubiola
Dear all,
I worked on low-noise regenerative dividers long time ago.
See my home page http://rubiola.org , click on "more journal articles"

22. E. Rubiola, M. Olivier, J. Groslambert, Phase noise in the  
regenerative frequency dividers (PDF, 670 kB),
IEEE Transact. Instrum. Meas. vol.41 no.3 pp.353-360, June 1992. ©IEEE.

Notice that you can divide by 4 with a single divider,
using the 3rd harmonics internally generated by the double balanced  
mixer.
Dividing 80 MHz, you feed a 20 MHz back to the mixer.
A 60 MHz signal is generated by the mixer.
80 MHz - 60 MHz = 20 MHz, here you go.

Another issue is the correction of the phase noise of a digital divider
using a double-balanced mixer.
Read this *smart* article

D. Huffman, Extremely low noise frequency divider,
Microwave Journal November 1985, pp. 209--210

Very best,


Enrico


On 29 Sep 2007, at 3:02 , John Miles wrote:

> Submitted for general discussion: I have a need to divide a low- 
> noise 80-MHz
> clock by two, twice, to obtain 40 MHz and 20 MHz outputs, and my  
> current
> thinking is that the quietest way to do this is with a pair of  
> cascaded
> regenerative dividers.  Does anyone have any 'favorite' papers or
> application notes on regenerative divider design/construction?
>
> In particular, what considerations go into determining the  
> bandwidth of the
> post-mixer filter, and how important is the phase-shift network  
> often seen
> in the feedback path?  My overriding concern here is phase-noise
> performance.
>
> -- john, KE5FX
>
>
>
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Enrico Rubiola
professor of electronics

web:http://rubiola.org
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

FEMTO-ST Institute
32 av. de l'Observatoire
25044 Besancon, FRANCE
voice:  +33(0)381.853940 (E.Rubiola)
voice:  +33(0)381.853999 (switchboard)
fax:+33(0)381.853998


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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-29 Thread Magnus Danielson
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From: "John Miles" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions
Date: Fri, 28 Sep 2007 21:40:04 -0700
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> > A divide by 8 conjugate regenerative divider has been built and tested
> > by NIST.
> >
> > In principle it would be possible to generate F/2, F/4 and F/8 outputs
> > simultaneously by adding parallel conjugate filtered feedback paths
> > tuned to 3F/2, 7F/8, 3F/4, F/2, F/4 and F/8.
> > However the difficulties associated with optimising the phase shifts and
> > gains of all the filtered feedback paths may be more trouble than
> > its worth.
> 
> Yes, I imagine I'll take the lazy way out and just run separate dividers in
> parallel from a 2- or 3-way splitter following the OCXO.  Thanks for the
> uploads and links.  Got some reading to do this weekend.

Each divisor would be really simple anyway.

> I rigged up a divider last night with a 220-MHz SAW filter and a
> randomly-chosen Mini-Circuits mixer, MMIC amp, and 2:1 splitter.  I was
> surprised at how well it worked without any tweaking.  It was kind of
> surreal to see the f/2 output appear abruptly once the 440-MHz input reached
> a certain level.  At +4 dBm of excitation there was nothing at the output,
> but with +5 dBm at the input, a nice clean 220 MHz signal appeared out of
> nowhere at +16 dBm.

Did you experience the start of oscillation also as you went from +3 dBm to
+4 dBm? The impulse may be part of getting the oscillation running.

Cheers,
Magnus

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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-28 Thread John Miles
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> What's the crystal for?
> Crystal filters aren't usually necessary

The nature of the filter(s) is one of the questions that I'm hoping those
papers will help answer.  I was guessing that a crystal filter would make
the divider harder to start -- i.e., would require more gain from the
amplifier -- but would be good for attenuating any remaining noise at
offsets beyond the filter bandwidth.  Sort of like the 40 and 160 MHz
monolithic crystal filters in the 8662A's reference section (which is what
the circuit I'm working on will eventually replace).

> A divide by 8 conjugate regenerative divider has been built and tested
> by NIST.
>
> In principle it would be possible to generate F/2, F/4 and F/8 outputs
> simultaneously by adding parallel conjugate filtered feedback paths
> tuned to 3F/2, 7F/8, 3F/4, F/2, F/4 and F/8.
> However the difficulties associated with optimising the phase shifts and
> gains of all the filtered feedback paths may be more trouble than
> its worth.

Yes, I imagine I'll take the lazy way out and just run separate dividers in
parallel from a 2- or 3-way splitter following the OCXO.  Thanks for the
uploads and links.  Got some reading to do this weekend.

I rigged up a divider last night with a 220-MHz SAW filter and a
randomly-chosen Mini-Circuits mixer, MMIC amp, and 2:1 splitter.  I was
surprised at how well it worked without any tweaking.  It was kind of
surreal to see the f/2 output appear abruptly once the 440-MHz input reached
a certain level.  At +4 dBm of excitation there was nothing at the output,
but with +5 dBm at the input, a nice clean 220 MHz signal appeared out of
nowhere at +16 dBm.

-- john, KE5FX



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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-28 Thread Bruce Griffiths
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John Miles wrote:
>
> Thanks much, Bruce.  I suspected either you or Enrico R. would have some
> knowledge of that.
>
> Note that I need to end up with 40 *and* 20 MHz, hence the plan to cascade
> two /2 dividers.  If there is a better topology for obtaining both of these
> outputs, it would be good to know.  I'd imagine that a /4 divider running
> alongside a /2 divider would be better from the additive-noise perspective.
>
> I will probably end up wanting a 10-MHz output as well.  The obvious
> question would be, should that be a separate F/8 + 7F/8 path, or a /2
> divider following the /4 divider?  I haven't seen many references to /8
> regenerative dividers but I suppose they'd be workable.  Availability of
> 8.75 MHz crystals might be what decides that question.
>
> -- john, KE5FX
>
>   
John

What's the crystal for?
Crystal filters aren't usually necessary necessary.
A divide by 8 conjugate regenerative divider has been built and tested
by NIST.

In principle it would be possible to generate F/2, F/4 and F/8 outputs
simultaneously by adding parallel conjugate filtered feedback paths
tuned to 3F/2, 7F/8, 3F/4, F/2, F/4 and F/8.
However the difficulties associated with optimising the phase shifts and
gains of all the filtered feedback paths may be more trouble than its worth.

Bruce

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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-28 Thread Bruce Griffiths
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Bruce Griffiths wrote:
> Magnus Danielson wrote:
>   
>> The article in question is...
>> http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1890.pdf
>> but also
>> http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1800.pdf
>>
>> See for yourself.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Magnus
>>
>>   
>> 
> Plus:
>
> http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1208.pdf
>
> Bruce
>   
And:

http://ois.nist.gov/nistpubs/technipubs/recent/search.cfm?dbibid=21241

Although you may have to buy this one.

Bruce


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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-28 Thread Bruce Griffiths
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Magnus Danielson wrote:
> The article in question is...
> http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1890.pdf
> but also
> http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1800.pdf
>
> See for yourself.
>
> Cheers,
> Magnus
>
>   
Plus:

http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1208.pdf

Bruce

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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-28 Thread Bruce Griffiths
Magnus Danielson wrote:
> From: "John Miles" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions
> Date: Fri, 28 Sep 2007 18:51:58 -0700
> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
>   
>> ); SAEximRunCond expanded to false
>> Errors-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] RETRY
>>
>>
>> 
>>> You can do better than that, a single regenerative divider can be
>>> configured to divide by 4.
>>> A pair of parallel feedback paths (with amplifiers), one tuned to F/4
>>> and the other to 3F/4 are best.
>>> NIST did some work (together with Indian collaborators) on this type of
>>> generalised regenerative divider recently.
>>> Papers are stored on my Windows machine, will boot it up and locate them.
>>>   
>> Thanks much, Bruce.  I suspected either you or Enrico R. would have some
>> knowledge of that.
>>
>> Note that I need to end up with 40 *and* 20 MHz, hence the plan to cascade
>> two /2 dividers.  If there is a better topology for obtaining both of these
>> outputs, it would be good to know.  I'd imagine that a /4 divider running
>> alongside a /2 divider would be better from the additive-noise perspective.
>>
>> I will probably end up wanting a 10-MHz output as well.  The obvious
>> question would be, should that be a separate F/8 + 7F/8 path, or a /2
>> divider following the /4 divider?  I haven't seen many references to /8
>> regenerative dividers but I suppose they'd be workable.  Availability of
>> 8.75 MHz crystals might be what decides that question.
>> 
>
> The article in question is...
> http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1890.pdf
> but also
> http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1800.pdf
>
> See for yourself.
>
> Cheers,
> Magnus
>
>
>   
To which you can add Enrico's paper:

http://www.femto-st.fr/~rubiola/journal-articles/rubiola1992im-regenerative-divider-noise.pdf
<http://www.femto-st.fr/%7Erubiola/journal-articles/rubiola1992im-regenerative-divider-noise.pdf>

Bruce


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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-28 Thread Magnus Danielson
); SAEximRunCond expanded to false
Errors-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] RETRY

From: "John Miles" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions
Date: Fri, 28 Sep 2007 18:51:58 -0700
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> ); SAEximRunCond expanded to false
> Errors-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] RETRY
> 
> 
> > You can do better than that, a single regenerative divider can be
> > configured to divide by 4.
> > A pair of parallel feedback paths (with amplifiers), one tuned to F/4
> > and the other to 3F/4 are best.
> > NIST did some work (together with Indian collaborators) on this type of
> > generalised regenerative divider recently.
> > Papers are stored on my Windows machine, will boot it up and locate them.
> 
> Thanks much, Bruce.  I suspected either you or Enrico R. would have some
> knowledge of that.
> 
> Note that I need to end up with 40 *and* 20 MHz, hence the plan to cascade
> two /2 dividers.  If there is a better topology for obtaining both of these
> outputs, it would be good to know.  I'd imagine that a /4 divider running
> alongside a /2 divider would be better from the additive-noise perspective.
> 
> I will probably end up wanting a 10-MHz output as well.  The obvious
> question would be, should that be a separate F/8 + 7F/8 path, or a /2
> divider following the /4 divider?  I haven't seen many references to /8
> regenerative dividers but I suppose they'd be workable.  Availability of
> 8.75 MHz crystals might be what decides that question.

The article in question is...
http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1890.pdf
but also
http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/general/pdf/1800.pdf

See for yourself.

Cheers,
Magnus

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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-28 Thread John Miles

> You can do better than that, a single regenerative divider can be
> configured to divide by 4.
> A pair of parallel feedback paths (with amplifiers), one tuned to F/4
> and the other to 3F/4 are best.
> NIST did some work (together with Indian collaborators) on this type of
> generalised regenerative divider recently.
> Papers are stored on my Windows machine, will boot it up and locate them.

Thanks much, Bruce.  I suspected either you or Enrico R. would have some
knowledge of that.

Note that I need to end up with 40 *and* 20 MHz, hence the plan to cascade
two /2 dividers.  If there is a better topology for obtaining both of these
outputs, it would be good to know.  I'd imagine that a /4 divider running
alongside a /2 divider would be better from the additive-noise perspective.

I will probably end up wanting a 10-MHz output as well.  The obvious
question would be, should that be a separate F/8 + 7F/8 path, or a /2
divider following the /4 divider?  I haven't seen many references to /8
regenerative dividers but I suppose they'd be workable.  Availability of
8.75 MHz crystals might be what decides that question.

-- john, KE5FX


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Re: [time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-28 Thread Bruce Griffiths
John Miles wrote:
> Submitted for general discussion: I have a need to divide a low-noise 80-MHz
> clock by two, twice, to obtain 40 MHz and 20 MHz outputs, and my current
> thinking is that the quietest way to do this is with a pair of cascaded
> regenerative dividers.  Does anyone have any 'favorite' papers or
> application notes on regenerative divider design/construction?
>
> In particular, what considerations go into determining the bandwidth of the
> post-mixer filter, and how important is the phase-shift network often seen
> in the feedback path?  My overriding concern here is phase-noise
> performance.
>
> -- john, KE5FX
>
>   
John

You can do better than that, a single regenerative divider can be
configured to divide by 4.
A pair of parallel feedback paths (with amplifiers), one tuned to F/4
and the other to 3F/4 are best.
NIST did some work (together with Indian collaborators) on this type of
generalised regenerative divider recently.
Papers are stored on my Windows machine, will boot it up and locate them.

Bruce

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[time-nuts] Basic regenerative-divider questions

2007-09-28 Thread John Miles
Submitted for general discussion: I have a need to divide a low-noise 80-MHz
clock by two, twice, to obtain 40 MHz and 20 MHz outputs, and my current
thinking is that the quietest way to do this is with a pair of cascaded
regenerative dividers.  Does anyone have any 'favorite' papers or
application notes on regenerative divider design/construction?

In particular, what considerations go into determining the bandwidth of the
post-mixer filter, and how important is the phase-shift network often seen
in the feedback path?  My overriding concern here is phase-noise
performance.

-- john, KE5FX



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