data sheet

C

Charles

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I am looking for a data sheet, or basic info, for a packaged oscillator:

NFC device, MC595X2-003W

Thanks!
 
On Fri, 22 Mar 2013, Charles wrote:

I am looking for a data sheet, or basic info, for a packaged oscillator:

NFC device, MC595X2-003W

Thanks!

Is that supposed to be a 3.24MHz oscillator?

I got that from putting the part number and "NFC" into a search engine.

Is the question because you don't know the frequency, or because it is
actually some exotic oscillator? If it's a standard crystal oscillator
in a metal case that fits in a 14pin DIP socket, the pinout is standard,
though I don't recall the pinout offhand. If it's something more exotic,
I haven't a clue, there was only one hit for the part number.

If it is a standard oscillator, connecting it up to ground and +5v would
make it oscillate and either a frequency counter or tuning a shortwave
receiver across the band should find the frequency (though a receiver can
be slow, and there's no guarantee that the oscillator is on a frequency
below 30MHz).

Michael
 
"Michael Black" wrote in message
news:alpine.LNX.2.02.1303230010470.8400@darkstar.example.org...

On Fri, 22 Mar 2013, Charles wrote:

I am looking for a data sheet, or basic info, for a packaged oscillator:

NFC device, MC595X2-003W

Thanks!

Is that supposed to be a 3.24MHz oscillator?

I got that from putting the part number and "NFC" into a search engine.

Is the question because you don't know the frequency, or because it is
actually some exotic oscillator? If it's a standard crystal oscillator
in a metal case that fits in a 14pin DIP socket, the pinout is standard,
though I don't recall the pinout offhand. If it's something more exotic,
I haven't a clue, there was only one hit for the part number.

If it is a standard oscillator, connecting it up to ground and +5v would
make it oscillate and either a frequency counter or tuning a shortwave
receiver across the band should find the frequency (though a receiver can
be slow, and there's no guarantee that the oscillator is on a frequency
below 30MHz).

Thanks Michael. I was lead astray by some erroneous Internet data. It's a
filter.
 
"Michael Black" <et472@ncf.ca> wrote in message
news:alpine.LNX.2.02.1303230010470.8400@darkstar.example.org...
On Fri, 22 Mar 2013, Charles wrote:

I am looking for a data sheet, or basic info, for a packaged oscillator:

NFC device, MC595X2-003W

Thanks!

Is that supposed to be a 3.24MHz oscillator?

I got that from putting the part number and "NFC" into a search engine.

Is the question because you don't know the frequency, or because it is
actually some exotic oscillator? If it's a standard crystal oscillator in
a metal case that fits in a 14pin DIP socket, the pinout is standard,
though I don't recall the pinout offhand.
IIRC the supply pins are identical to common TTL 14 pin packages, usually
the output is on pin 8 (pin 1 as well for dual frequency versions).

ECL types may be different, so correct identification could be important.
 

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