Oscillator Schematic 3 to 7 MHz and 217 Mhz

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A request for a schematic to create a simple oscillator capable of operating at 3 to 7 MHz and approximately 219 MHz was made, highlighting the challenges of simple oscillators in delivering power and maintaining frequency stability when connected to loads. It was suggested that using a buffer between the oscillator and the load is necessary to avoid these issues. For the lower frequency range, a Schmitt trigger oscillator was recommended as a reliable option. At 219 MHz, more advanced construction techniques and potentially a kit with a pre-designed circuit were advised for success. Various resources and links for oscillator designs were shared to assist in the project.
gedfire
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Hello All,

I would like a schematic that would help me to create a simple oscillator that can drive an aircore coil or other components at 3 to 7 MHz and 219 MHz approximately.Any help is appreciated.



Gary
 
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One of the problems with "simple" oscillators is that they can't deliver much power to any circuit, and that they change their frequency or stop oscillating when you connect a load. So you usually need a buffer between the oscillating stage and the load. So we are moving away from "simple".

The simplest arrangement may be where it is feasible to use the aircore coil as the inductance in the resonant circuit of the oscillator itself. You'd need to switch or vary capacitors to change the frequency.

A google search on "RF oscillator" should turn up a surfeit of candidates. For a 200MHz oscillator you may need a different circuit, one less forgiving to construction liberties.
 
At 3 to 7 MHz you can have a Schmitt trigger oscillate. Easy, reliable.

At 200MHz you need experience. If not, you will fail. Your best hope would be a completely freezed design, already at your precise frequency, where the printed circuit is fully drawn - something like a kit.
 
gedfire said:
I would like a schematic that would help me to create a simple oscillator that can drive an aircore coil or other components at 3 to 7 MHz and 219 MHz approximately.Any help is appreciated.
A couple of transistor oscillators w/ handy construction hints & cautions, for the 4 MHz range:
http://www.sm0vpo.com/blocks/osc7m00.htm
http://ece.wpi.edu/courses/ece2011/labs/lab5A09final.pdf[/color]

Many are listed here: http://www.epanorama.net/links/oscillator.html
including a simple CMOS hex inverter oscillator: http://www.ee.washington.edu/circuit_archive/circuits/F_ASCII_Schem.html#ASCIISCHEM_004

Guaranteed hours of fun! :smile: :smile:
 
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NascentOxygen said:
One of the problems with "simple" oscillators is that they can't deliver much power to any circuit, and that they change their frequency or stop oscillating when you connect a load. So you usually need a buffer between the oscillating stage and the load. So we are moving away from "simple".

The simplest arrangement may be where it is feasible to use the aircore coil as the inductance in the resonant circuit of the oscillator itself. You'd need to switch or vary capacitors to change the frequency.

A google search on "RF oscillator" should turn up a surfeit of candidates. For a 200MHz oscillator you may need a different circuit, one less forgiving to construction liberties.

Thanks for your informed response.I appreciate it.


Ged
 
Enthalpy said:
At 3 to 7 MHz you can have a Schmitt trigger oscillate. Easy, reliable.

At 200MHz you need experience. If not, you will fail. Your best hope would be a completely freezed design, already at your precise frequency, where the printed circuit is fully drawn - something like a kit.

Thanks for replying, where could I get such a kit?

Regards,
Gary
 
Within what frequency range could the 217 (or is it 219) MHz oscillator be? What application do you have it mind for this?
 

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