Interesting stuff as ever, Albert. I've used single and double tuned LC doublers, but as I said earlier in response to Mixin, both need tuning and setting up with an analyser (and careful screening, as you can end up susceptible to taking off when close to resonance). I can see how you get around it with the dual common base (or gate) arrangement but it's more components, transformers, looking for balanced devices etc so I just made the call that for my application, there was nothing lost in setting up rigs manually. Diode doublers have never been an option, I had too many bad experiences with those horrible SBL1/SRA1 things.Albert H wrote:I always used doubler (even tripler) based exciters for the longest time. It was easy to prevent RF feedback problems from the PA to the VCO, and it was also easy to get cheap 74HC CMOS to work at 54 MHz.
My earliest exciter efforts, before I did any commercial electronics, were on-frequency and in the absence of the internet as a teenager I learned from PMR service manuals. When the penny dropped about how a PLL worked, my first effort was (I think) a 4069 crystal oscillator at 2MHz divided by 2 with a 4013, into a 4046 and followed by a passive loop filter with quite a long time constant. The on-frequency exciter was derived from, IIRC, a TAIT Band III VCO modded for 100MHz into an SP8629 prescaler, into the 4046. The phase comparison therefore took place at 1MHz. Crude but it worked.
I used the 2MHz/4013 arrangement rather than 1MHz because it was quite a lot more expensive to get crystals cut for 1MHz. I had the rocks cut by Quartslab, 2MHz ones were far cheaper and I always presumed, aroused less suspicion (not that I ever had a problem with them during my time on the AM bands

The VCO was followed by a couple of buffers also from the TAIT and onwards to a variety of PAs, usually modified PMR. This stayed the same for a few years, but the synthesizer got more sophisticated (MC145151, I possibly still have a very battered photocopy of a cheat sheet from R+EW). I think I got into frequency multiplier chains in the mid 90s after suffering feedback with the PMR VCO which as you say possibly wasn't built to the same exacting standards as TAIT had done...