E
Ecnerwal
Guest
When I go looking for information on crystal filters, everything I can
find seems to be aimed at using a bunch of crystals and capacitors to
widen the bandwidth, or else it's marketing for people who would be
happy to sell me crystal filters of the above sort. I don't want to
widen the bandwidth...
What I'm presently interested in is an exceedingly narrow-band filter
and/or amplifier. 60Khz for the monent, as I'm playing with WWVB - and
while I can buy an off-the-shelf amplifier or even amplifier and digital
buffer chip for $3-4 (CME6005 and CME8000) which uses an external
crystal to get very narrow bandwidth, there's no real discussion of
what, precisely, that's doing. As a practical person, I may end up
buying one of these units as a major building block, but I want a better
general understanding going into it, as I've really done very little
with radio, and this is as much about learning what's what as the actual
end result.
All the DIY WWVB receivers I've found are using LC filters, which is
classic, but seems to be more prone to noise than a very narrow
bandwidth filter would be, given that in this case the frequency of the
signal is _very_ well defined - in fact, given that I can get "the
correct time" rather easily from any network attached computer these
days, the frequency reference is as much or more of a driving reason as
the time codes are. I don't have any logical reason to spend money
sending my elderly ovenized crystal reference out for calibration, but
I'd still like to be able to maintain it on spec as much as possible -
which is, in theory, possible from the WWVB signal. The units mentioned
above claim to get about a 10HZ bandwidth, though I'd call the datasheet
"sketchy" at best.
Is it as simple as "slap a 60KHz crystal in line with the input (or the
feedback path of an amplifier), and only 60KHZ will get through"
(perhaps with some bypassing to block any multiples: 120KHZ, 180KHz,
etc.)? That seems a bit too simplistic, but other than a reference to
Walter Cady's 1922 paper (which I have not tried to go track down in
person) using single crystals for very narrow bandwidth coupling (in
this article: http://www.ieee-uffc.org/freqcontrol/crystal.html ), I've
somehow managed to miss any discussion of very narrowband crystal
filters at the most basic (or too basic to be discussed) level.
I need to clear the paper and clutter off my bench and get to playing
with this, having finally gotten a sweep generator.
--
Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by
find seems to be aimed at using a bunch of crystals and capacitors to
widen the bandwidth, or else it's marketing for people who would be
happy to sell me crystal filters of the above sort. I don't want to
widen the bandwidth...
What I'm presently interested in is an exceedingly narrow-band filter
and/or amplifier. 60Khz for the monent, as I'm playing with WWVB - and
while I can buy an off-the-shelf amplifier or even amplifier and digital
buffer chip for $3-4 (CME6005 and CME8000) which uses an external
crystal to get very narrow bandwidth, there's no real discussion of
what, precisely, that's doing. As a practical person, I may end up
buying one of these units as a major building block, but I want a better
general understanding going into it, as I've really done very little
with radio, and this is as much about learning what's what as the actual
end result.
All the DIY WWVB receivers I've found are using LC filters, which is
classic, but seems to be more prone to noise than a very narrow
bandwidth filter would be, given that in this case the frequency of the
signal is _very_ well defined - in fact, given that I can get "the
correct time" rather easily from any network attached computer these
days, the frequency reference is as much or more of a driving reason as
the time codes are. I don't have any logical reason to spend money
sending my elderly ovenized crystal reference out for calibration, but
I'd still like to be able to maintain it on spec as much as possible -
which is, in theory, possible from the WWVB signal. The units mentioned
above claim to get about a 10HZ bandwidth, though I'd call the datasheet
"sketchy" at best.
Is it as simple as "slap a 60KHz crystal in line with the input (or the
feedback path of an amplifier), and only 60KHZ will get through"
(perhaps with some bypassing to block any multiples: 120KHZ, 180KHz,
etc.)? That seems a bit too simplistic, but other than a reference to
Walter Cady's 1922 paper (which I have not tried to go track down in
person) using single crystals for very narrow bandwidth coupling (in
this article: http://www.ieee-uffc.org/freqcontrol/crystal.html ), I've
somehow managed to miss any discussion of very narrowband crystal
filters at the most basic (or too basic to be discussed) level.
I need to clear the paper and clutter off my bench and get to playing
with this, having finally gotten a sweep generator.
--
Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by