On 3/26/2012 8:15 AM, Charles P. Steinmetz wrote:
Bruce wrote:
A circuit schematic for a current feedback triple with reasonably low
noise and distortion is attached.
Quite a good performer for such a simple circuit. I found, both in
modeling and on the bench, that there is the usual noise bump at
200-300 MHz and non-monotonic behavior out in the 900 MHz region. The
latter can be solved by using an MPSH10 for Q1, which also brings the
in-band noise and phase noise down a little. The former can be
addressed by adding 8-10 pF across R2, at the expense of lowering the
3 dB point from around 150 MHz to around 80 MHz. For use as a 5 or 10
MHz distribution amp, I'd include the cap.
The input impedance stays decently high everywhere the amp has useful
gain -- there should be no problem paralleling 10 of them on a 50 ohm
source. You can raise R2 just a tad to get back to unity gain, if
needed. The reverse isolation is about 35 dB. This can be improved
to around 50 dB by adding an emitter follower at the input, adjusting
R7 and R8 to maintain Q1's base voltage. The noise increase is
negligible.
It is fairly sensitive to power supply noise, so you want a nice quiet
supply. I used a regulator built with an LM399 and LT1028.
Since the transformer is 1:1, one might be tempted to omit it. For a
distribution amp that will be connected to a number of different
instruments, however, one is well advised to include it to isolate the
various returns. 6 bifilar turns on a T43-37 toroid core and 14
bifilar turns on a T61-37 both worked fine for me. If you have 1:1
transformers from a spare Ethernet card, those should, too.
For a Q&D distribution amp, this would be a pretty good candidate.
Best regards,
Charles
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if one is distributing 10 Mhz, does it really matter what the circuit
does at 300 and 900 Mhz??
73's,
Randy, KI6WAS
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