Hi

As mentioned in Rick’s post, it’s not really Q, it’s the motional capacitance 
that is the issue. 
Even if you resonate out C0, you still have to deal with Cm. The only practical 
high Q designs
for crystals are very low Cm resonators. Yes, if you could do a design that had 
Rm of 0.1 ohms
it could be high Q without a high Cm. That’s not the way it works out. 

Since the electrical equivalent circuit is related to the physics of the 
resonator, simply changing 
this or that is not trivial. You might well have to change the basic material 
to impact some of this.
Simply as a side note, SC’s are “worse” (lower) for Cm than AT’s of similar 
frequency and overtone. 

> On Nov 1, 2017, at 6:44 PM, Dana Whitlow <k8yumdoo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Bob,
> 
> This discussion is getting really interesting.  In thinking about the
> crystal Q versus
> tuning range conundrum, two (presumably-overlapping) concerns come to mind:
> 
> 1. The motional parameters of a high-Q crystal are such that the external
> network
>    needed to pull it very far would be wholly impractical.

Depending on you definition of impractical … this is TimeNuts …. In the real 
world, yes indeed
impractical. 

> 
> 2. Varactors themselves probably have pretty limited Q over much of their
> range.

They have a very finite Q. That turns into loss in the oscillator circuit. Loss 
goes up as the
pull increases. The varactor is a bigger part of the circuit as the pull 
increases.  The Q of a real oscillator 
is only partly from the crystal. Tossing more loss into the oscillator will 
impact the overall Q. 
You might go from crystal / 2 to crystal / 5 (very arbitrary numbers and only 
for illustration … ) 

> 
> Is my thinking on the right track at all?

Pretty much.

Bob

> 
> Dana  K8YUM
> 
> On Wed, Nov 1, 2017 at 5:13 PM, Bob kb8tq <kb...@n1k.org> wrote:
> 
>> Hi
>> 
>> A high Q crystal by design is very difficult to tune. Putting it in a
>> circuit that will
>> swing it far enough to compensate it degrades the Q. In addition, thermal
>> noise
>> will come into the compensation circuit (even if it is noise free) and
>> degrade things.
>> 
>> Bob
>> 
>>> On Nov 1, 2017, at 4:38 PM, Hal Murray <hmur...@megapathdsl.net> wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> In general, OCXOs have crystals with high Q -> low phase noise,
>> especially
>>>> compared to a TCXO, which *can't* have high Q, or the  temperature
>>>> compensation circuit can't do it's work.
>>> 
>>> I don't understand that.  Why can't I build a high Q TCXO?  I don't need
>> to
>>> change the compensation very fast.  Are good crystals high enough Q that
>> it
>>> would take too long?
>>> 
>>> What's the time constant?  I'd guess it's Q/freq, maybe with factors of
>> 2pi
>>> or e or ???
>>> 
>>> That seems small relative to how fast temperature changes.  (but maybe
>> fast
>>> relative to FCC smearing or things like that)
>>> 
>>> 
>>> --
>>> These are my opinions.  I hate spam.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
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