Hi guys,
Is it just me, or does Hittite (bought by Analog Devices) seriously lack in the documentation department? I'm looking at some of their stuff and, well, the datasheets are vague and incomplete. See:
http://www.analog.com/media/en/technical-documentation/data-sheets/hmc470A.pdfIt's seven pages, one of which is an automatically inserted Analog Devices page full of links and another one is the evaluation board layout. The package drawing is a crudely inserted JPG that suffered due to poor compression. There are helpful hints like:
External capacitor to ground is required. Select value for lowest frequency of operation. Place capacitor as close to pins as possible.
For 60MHz is this 1nF? 1pF? 330pF? 10TF? Is there any formula to calculate this? Or a table? Or something?
This pin is DC coupled and matched to 50 Ohm. Blocking capacitors are required. Select value based on lowest frequency of operation.
So, is it a DC or AC coupled pin? I'm confused, if it requires a DC blocking capacitor, then the attenuator does not go from DC, but from some frequency.
These pins should be connected to PCB RF ground to maximize performance.
Then don't name them N/C?
There are no timing diagrams, examples of waveforms (I'd love to see if there are any glitches during attenuation changes in the output signal) etc. Basically, the datasheet(s) assume that the user feels safe assuming a lot of stuff or does not care about a lot of stuff.
A different device:
For frequencies less than 700 MHz, the use of ACG capacitors C4, C5 and C6 is recommended. For frequencies greater than 700 MHz, the HMC792ALP4E has similar performance with and without the ACG capacitors
What's "
similar"? Is it 0.42 dB different with a peak at 712MHz? Does it spawn demons from pin 4 but otherwise works exactly the same?
Basically it seems to me that the datasheets from Hitite are abridged versions really.
/rant
By the way, does anyone know of a small switchable attenuator ranging from 0-15dB attenuation, preferably with no external components? It needs to work at least in the 55-65 MHz range, beyond that I don't care, 50 Ohms IO, 2dB or smaller steps, parralel interface and preferably fast state changes without glitches.
David