You wrote: > describe the Colpitts oscillator, Pierce oscillator, and Clapp oscillator as topologically identical crystal oscillators
As you mentioned, the oscillators can be drawn differently depending on which components are connected to ground. I draw the Colpitts oscillator as an inverting common-emitter amplifier driving a 'pi' filter with one leg of each capacitor connected to ground and the other leg of each capacitor connected to opposite sides of the inductor. The 'output' of the 'pi' filter connects to the input of the inverting amplifier.
As I understand it, the Clapp oscillator is different because a third capacitor is added in series with the inductor -- you still have the 'pi' filter format, but the top horizontal member of the 'pi' is an inductor & capacitor instead of just an inductor. The Clapp configuration supposedly creates a more stable frequency than the Colpitts one.
February 20, 2021 at 10:57 AM
Anonymous said...
I worked at Motorola in the 80's. The SCxxxxx designation was used for custom or semi-custom IC (as opposed to MCxxxx for standard market ICs). If it was CMOS, it was probably designed in Austin TX.
The 'cloverfield' gate is interesting, I suspect this technology could scale as the sum of small gate areas is smaller than the gate area of one very large gate. I drew this fractal that shows that you can easily keep the trace length to all gates equal: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Eu0iEp0XUAA3Xqo?format=jpg&name=large
February 22, 2021 at 1:36 AM
Anonymous said...
The very first paragraph explaining the oscillator circuit seems confused. I think it has "increases" and "decreases" swapped in certain places. Or something. (Feel free to just fix the text and not post this comment.)
Thank you for this presentation. I learned things. Again.
To imagine that, in large part, the lives of astronauts and the Apollo program depended on this little box, is chilling. Thank you for unlocking yet another Apollo program magic.
"Teardown of a quartz crystal oscillator and the tiny IC inside"
11 Comments -
You wrote:
> describe the Colpitts oscillator, Pierce oscillator, and Clapp oscillator as topologically identical crystal oscillators
As you mentioned, the oscillators can be drawn differently depending on which components are connected to ground. I draw the Colpitts oscillator as an inverting common-emitter amplifier driving a 'pi' filter with one leg of each capacitor connected to ground and the other leg of each capacitor connected to opposite sides of the inductor. The 'output' of the 'pi' filter connects to the input of the inverting amplifier.
As I understand it, the Clapp oscillator is different because a third capacitor is added in series with the inductor -- you still have the 'pi' filter format, but the top horizontal member of the 'pi' is an inductor & capacitor instead of just an inductor. The Clapp configuration supposedly creates a more stable frequency than the Colpitts one.
February 20, 2021 at 10:57 AM
I worked at Motorola in the 80's. The SCxxxxx designation was used for custom or semi-custom IC (as opposed to MCxxxx for standard market ICs). If it was CMOS, it was probably designed in Austin TX.
February 20, 2021 at 12:56 PM
The A98R is the Motorola Mask ID
February 20, 2021 at 12:59 PM
Dejligt at læse om tak
February 20, 2021 at 4:55 PM
Having one end of your capacitors grounded was very handy in the days of big tunable cheese slicer caps.
February 21, 2021 at 1:32 PM
Thanks for linking McGahey's dissertation on the history of piezoelectric quartz crystal's, it looks like it will be a great read.
February 21, 2021 at 3:11 PM
The 'cloverfield' gate is interesting, I suspect this technology could scale as the sum of small gate areas is smaller than the gate area of one very large gate. I drew this fractal that shows that you can easily keep the trace length to all gates equal: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Eu0iEp0XUAA3Xqo?format=jpg&name=large
February 22, 2021 at 1:36 AM
The very first paragraph explaining the oscillator circuit seems confused. I think it has "increases" and "decreases" swapped in certain places. Or something. (Feel free to just fix the text and not post this comment.)
Thank you for this presentation. I learned things. Again.
August 9, 2022 at 8:15 AM
Simply incredible !!!
August 29, 2022 at 7:15 PM
Amazing X-ray machine.
Unimaginable photos.
Excellent contribution.
Thanks for contributing.
August 29, 2022 at 7:32 PM
To imagine that, in large part, the lives of astronauts and the Apollo program depended on this little box, is chilling.
Thank you for unlocking yet another Apollo program magic.
August 29, 2022 at 7:36 PM