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Resonator datasheet needed


nickagian

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I have asked for a ceramic resonator at about 10MHz for my microcontoller project and I was given this one...the only thing that is written on it is "L10.7A",which I guess shows the frequency, 10.7MHz...that is all I know about it! Oh and it has a red dot above one of the side pins..


It has an input, an output and a ground. The input and output pins can be swapped, and the center pin is probably the ground pin.


But thanks anyway, because that is what I was looking for... I didn`t know which pin is for the ground...
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  • 4 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

You have a wideband tuned circuit for shaping the IF of an FM radio. A microcontroller uses a narrowband resonator that is like a quartz crystal. Try the one you have, it might work.


Actually, that is not so. What he has is also used for microcontrollers. They are perfect for this application and much cheaper than a crystal. Just ground the middle pin and either of the outside pins can be connected to either of the clock pins on the micro. I have a drawer full of these for this application. I never use a crystal for a micro project, except for specific conditions where I need it. Resonators are commonly used instead of crystals. They take up less space on the pc board since you do not need the capacitors. It also sometimes eliminates routing problems on a pc board.

...of course, mine are much smaller than Hotwaterwizard's resonators  ;D

MP
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Actually, that is not so. What he has is also used for microcontrollers.
MP

His is 10.7MHz which is a wideband ceramic filter for the IF of an FM radio. Microcontrollers also use a 3-pin ceramic resonator but they are narrow-band and are 0.5% accurate.
Digikey has a 4.000MHz 3-pin ceramic resonator with the capacitors built in for only $.34US each. Ceramic filters for FM radios cost much more.
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Sure, 10.7 MHZ is a size used for IF, but micros also use various size Crystals for specific purposes. A 10.7 MHZ Resonator (or Crystal) will give you almost 3% less error in RS232 data transmission at 57600 baud than a 10 Mhz Resonator (or Crystal). I don't know what OP purchased since I am not clairvoyant, but I would be surprised if it did not work for this purpose. Even a digital gate based clock will work for a micro.


MP

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  • 2 weeks later...

10.7MHz resonator will work with microcontroller, even if it is defined as working up to 10MHz maximum.
However, the problem comes when if the program is written with the frequency of 10MHz, and now working with 10.7MHz things must happen in the wrong way.
Be careful with the 3-pin ceramic resonator (pin order always is: input-ground-output), as in some devices, the manufacturer already adds the internal caps across input and output to ground, so the enduser must not use the external caps. The only way you know that is identifying part from its marking on package and look up in the manufacturer's datasheet.

ElectronicsGeek

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