Troubleshooting Oscillations in an IF Amplifier

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The discussion revolves around troubleshooting oscillations in an IF amplifier, specifically at 10.7 MHz, caused by positive feedback when connecting a crystal filter to the base of an NPN transistor amplifier. The user initially attempted various solutions, including an L match, but found no success until adding a 3.3 pF capacitor across the collector and base, which stopped the oscillation but reduced gain. Proper shielding is suggested as a potential issue, emphasizing the need to prevent output radiation from feeding back into the input. An alternative solution proposed is to add a ferrite bead in series with the base of the transistor to mitigate the problem without affecting gain. The discussion highlights common challenges in amplifier design and the importance of feedback management.
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I'm working on an IF amp and whatever I do it starts oscillating.

A monolithic crystal filter 10.7 MHz, about 330 ohm is fed into a nicely designed npn transistor 20 dB amp, with bypass caps all over the sucker. It is in common emmiter configuration. The amp responds nicely to a test signal, but when I touch one end of the filter to the base, the amp starts oscillating at 10.7 MHz. I have to disconnect it from power to kill oscillation.

I tried a simple L match, but has no affect. So somehow the amp is getting a positive feedback.

Is there anyway to fix the problem?
 
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Can you post a picture and the schematic? Is it a kit, a homebrew, a work design, or working with an existing circuit from a TV or something?
 
Problem fixed, I put a 3.3 pf cap across the collector and the base to provide some more negative feedback. Oscillation stopped but the gain went down, grrr.

Don't have schematics, it's just a normal amp, I'm just baffled as to why that happened.
 
Proper sheilding is probaby the issue.
You need to keep the amp output from being radiated back to the input.
 
waht said:
Problem fixed, I put a 3.3 pf cap across the collector and the base to provide some more negative feedback. Oscillation stopped but the gain went down, grrr.

Don't have schematics, it's just a normal amp, I'm just baffled as to why that happened.

Instead of increasing the Miller capacitance like that, try adding a ferrite bead in series with the base of that transistor. If the transistor is a through-hole device, you can often just string a bead onto the base lead.
 
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