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|    sci.electronics.repair    |    Fixing electronic equipment    |    124,925 messages    |
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|    Message 124,479 of 124,925    |
|    chuck to Phil Hobbs    |
|    Re: Oscillator Distortion    |
|    18 Nov 24 20:05:00    |
      XPost: sci.electronics.design       From: donnyduck@gmail.com              The FET regulator is a filtered servo with fast cutoff and very slow       build up over thousands of cycles. The same is done with other       non-linear limiters using exponentially orders of magnitude higher       resistance when regulating so the decay rate is slow and low distortion.              Phil I think you had different assumptions for your au contraire opinion       on tail currents vs quasi-linear low decay currents when regulated       effectively. I don't see the difference except a non-linear device       starts up faster.              On 2024-11-18 3:14 p.m., Phil Hobbs wrote:              >       > Any oscillator with a nonlinear or bilinear gain control element that       > has to respond during a cycle has to deal with the distortion caused by       > that element. OTAs, JFET variable resistors, PIN diode attenuators,       > Vactrols, light bulbs, and so on, all have that problem. Tail current       > sources can avoid it, because you can make them as stiff as you like by       > cascoding, and filter the control voltage as well as you like. (I often       > use two- or three-pole capacitance multipliers on the supply rails of       > discrete circuitry, which is a similar idea.)              >       > Cheers       >       > Phil Hobbs       >              --       Cheers,       Tony Stewart N. Of Toronto       EE since 1975 practising retirement since 2004              --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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