XTAL011400
XTAL011400 is SPECIFYING SURFACE MOUNT QUARTZ CRYSTALS manufactured by C-MAC.
- Part of the XTAL011400_C comparator family.
- Part of the XTAL011400_C comparator family.
SPECIFYING SURFACE MOUNT QUARTZ CRYSTALS
A typical surface mount quartz crystal specification reads like this:
SURFACE MOUNT QUARTZ CRYSTALS
Frequency Stability Frequency stability is normally specified as a frequency tolerance over a defined operating temperature range with respect to the frequency at reference temperature. The temperature ranges are defined for each crystal in the relevant data sheet. However the majority of crystals will continue to operate quite satisfactorily outside the temperature range for which they are specified, but with a possible degradation in the value of frequency stability. Under normal conditions this will not damage the crystal. A crystal designed for operation over a restricted operating temperature range, (such as from 0 to 50°C) has a better frequency stability over that range than one designed for operation over a wide operating temperature range. Therefore it is important not to over specify the temperature range, as doing so will result in inferior performance for the same or greater cost; or greater cost for the same or inferior performance. Operating Temperature Ranges The standard operating temperature ranges for a crystal are:
- 24.0140MHz Frequency Holder Style
12SMX-B 15 30 20 18 Fund
TR T
Frequency Tolerance at 25°C Frequency Stability Lower end of Operating Temp Range Circuit Condition Overtone order Packaging Additional Text Code (for non-standard product) The following specification. notes define each element of the
Frequency
Frequency is normally specified in kilohertz (k Hz) up to 999.999k Hz and in megahertz (MHz) from 1.0MHz. All our puter-generated transaction documents follow this standard convention automatically. The frequency should be described to seven significant figures. If seven significant figures are not used, we assume that any figure that might follow those given may be taken as zero. Thus a frequency given as 16.6MHz will be taken as 16.60, not 16.66667. Some specifiers extend the use of k Hz...