R
rhor...@gmail.com
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On Thursday, October 1, 2020 at 4:17:49 AM UTC-5, piglet wrote:
At less than a 1/4 ampere load, I\'m not expecting much of a problem, especially not up around 2 - 5 GHz, which is where most of the electronics in the room operates. The impedance of the MOSFET I chose is 0.86 Ohms - perhaps I could choose one with a higher impedance and thus a lower slew rate, resulting in lower frequency harmonics. The leads will be about 1/4 of a meter, giving them an inductance of less than 500 microHenries - pretty insignificant at moderate RF frequencies, so a coil would not hurt. That said, a filter cap across the MOSFET of about 200 pF or so should quiet the noise well enough, I think, if it is even needed at all.
BTW, although the detector and the amp are rated at 7V, the comparator is listed at 5.5V max, so I went with a 5.6V Zener, rather than 6V. It\'s still pretty tight, but it should give a little more margin, just in case. I don\'t want to have to be replacing these every couple of years.
We haven\'t mentioned RFI yet but switching at a few hundred Hz into the
building wiring could be a potent source of radio interference. I don\'t
know what your site needs are but it may be prudent to allow for some
inductance and filter caps needed somewhere.
At less than a 1/4 ampere load, I\'m not expecting much of a problem, especially not up around 2 - 5 GHz, which is where most of the electronics in the room operates. The impedance of the MOSFET I chose is 0.86 Ohms - perhaps I could choose one with a higher impedance and thus a lower slew rate, resulting in lower frequency harmonics. The leads will be about 1/4 of a meter, giving them an inductance of less than 500 microHenries - pretty insignificant at moderate RF frequencies, so a coil would not hurt. That said, a filter cap across the MOSFET of about 200 pF or so should quiet the noise well enough, I think, if it is even needed at all.
BTW, although the detector and the amp are rated at 7V, the comparator is listed at 5.5V max, so I went with a 5.6V Zener, rather than 6V. It\'s still pretty tight, but it should give a little more margin, just in case. I don\'t want to have to be replacing these every couple of years.