Sujet : Re: The emitter-coupled monostable as slow differential amplifer
De : jlarkin_highland_tech (at) *nospam* nirgendwo (john larkin)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 20. Jul 2024, 22:04:10
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <l19o9j98qbvce13jqj9hsgfhpkoqc44qjq@4ax.com>
References : 1
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On Sat, 20 Jul 2024 15:29:58 +1000, Bill Sloman <
bill.sloman@ieee.org>
wrote:
About a month ago John Larkin dismissed the emitter coupled monostable
with "It's really a slow diffamp, not a one-shot."
>
If you feed a really slow pulse into it, it can look that way.
The 3.3pf capacitor at C1 doesn't feed through much current if you drive
the input with a slow edge
>
The simulation below demonstrates it working exactly that way.
>
No sensible circuit designer would deliberately drive it with a very
slowly rising and falling pulse - if you want it to work as a
monostable pulse stretcher, you have to drive it with a pulse that is
narrower than the one you want to get out.
>
Integrated circuit monostables don't have that limitation, but they are
more complicated, and slower. There was an ECL monostable that went down
to 10nsec, but the emitter-coupled monostable lets you get down to
1nsec, if you use it right.
>
That wasn't my point. My comment wasn't about the trigger risetime but
that if you put in a long trigger, you get a long output. It's hardly
a one-shot. The input and output levels are weird too.
If course a proper one-shot should fire cleanly on a fast or slow
rising edge.
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/idliehdrx7dr5fnffr4f9/28S505A.pdf?rlkey=gkmhx0r2fe4clu4qf98qoig03&dl=0