Crystal Clock Oscillator Works On 1.8V

Dec. 1, 2000
Touted as the industry's first 1.8V HCMOS crystal clock oscillator, the NTH through-hole-mount metal package and S1612 surface-mount ceramic package oscillators allow designers the opportunity to work with low-power, low-heat dissipation chips and

Touted as the industry's first 1.8V HCMOS crystal clock oscillator, the NTH through-hole-mount metal package and S1612 surface-mount ceramic package oscillators allow designers the opportunity to work with low-power, low-heat dissipation chips and chipsets. Throughout their frequency range of 20 to70 MHz, the oscillators maintain a stability of ±50 ppm or ±100 ppm over all conditions and can operate at temperatures between 0°C to 70°C.
Supply current ranges from 6 to 20 mA for frequencies up to 50 MHz and from 10-50 mA approaching 70 MHz. A tri-state function enables a high-impedance output when desired.
The NTH is available in a half-size, 8-pin through-hole-mount DIP metal package and the S1612 comes in a surface-mount, 5 x 7 mm ceramic package.

Company: SARONIX

Product URL: Click here for more information

Sponsored Recommendations

What are the Important Considerations when Assessing Cobot Safety?

April 16, 2024
A review of the requirements of ISO/TS 15066 and how they fit in with ISO 10218-1 and 10218-2 a consideration the complexities of collaboration.

Wire & Cable Cutting Digi-Spool® Service

April 16, 2024
Explore DigiKey’s Digi-Spool® professional cutting service for efficient and precise wire and cable management. Custom-cut to your exact specifications for a variety of cable ...

DigiKey Factory Tomorrow Season 3: Sustainable Manufacturing

April 16, 2024
Industry 4.0 is helping manufacturers develop and integrate technologies such as AI, edge computing and connectivity for the factories of tomorrow. Learn more at DigiKey today...

Connectivity – The Backbone of Sustainable Automation

April 16, 2024
Advanced interfaces for signals, data, and electrical power are essential. They help save resources and costs when networking production equipment.

Comments

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Electronic Design, create an account today!