Crystal oscillator frequencies: Difference between revisions
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Toybuilder (talk | contribs) 26.601712 is PAL only. Corresponding NTSC is 21.47727 (as indicated in the text). |
Toybuilder (talk | contribs) 20.25 MHz is a common multiple of NTSC and PAL scanlines (1287 and 1296 pixels/line respectively). |
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Revision as of 20:28, 28 July 2019
Crystal oscillators can be manufactured for oscillation over a wide range of frequencies, from a few kilohertz up to several hundred megahertz. Many applications call for a crystal oscillator frequency conveniently related to some other desired frequency, so hundreds of standard crystal frequencies are made in large quantities and stocked by electronics distributors. Using frequency dividers, frequency multipliers and phase locked loop circuits, it is practical to derive a wide range of frequencies from one reference frequency.
Frequency (MHz) | comm | UART | A/V | RTC | Primary uses |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.032 | Real-time clocks, watches; allows binary division to 1 kHz signal (25×1 kHz). | ||||
0.032768 | Real-time clocks, quartz watches and clocks; allows binary division to 1 Hz signal (215×1 Hz); also low-speed low-power microcontrollers. Very common. Available as TCXO.[1] | ||||
0.038 | Used with FM stereo encoder chip BA1404 and similar, also seen in DMMs | ||||
0.077500 | Real-time clocks, quartz watches and clocks; also the DCF77 frequency | ||||
0.100 | Real-time clocks, quartz watches and clocks, DMM dual slope ADCs (suppresses 50 Hz noise) | ||||
0.120 | DMM dual slope ADCs (suppresses 60 Hz noise) | ||||
0.131072 | Found in Fluke 17/19 DMM's[citation needed] | ||||
0.262144 | Allows binary division to 1 Hz signal (218×1 Hz), found in Bulova Precisionist high-frequency quartz watches.[2] | ||||
1.000 | Reference frequency. Common standard frequency. Harmonics fall on integer MHz frequencies. | ||||
1.008 | 9600 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates, used for 1200 and 2400 baud modems. (30 × 33600 baud, 105 × 9600 baud, 840 × 1200 baud) | |||
1.544 | DS1 | Bit clock for DS1 systems (±32 ppm, ANSI T1.102). | |||
1.8432 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (16 × 115200 baud, 192 × 9600 baud, 1536 × 1200 baud) | |||
2.048 | E1 | Allows binary division to 1 kHz (211×1 kHz). Bit clock for E1 systems (+-50 ppm, ITU G3703). | |||
2.097152 | Real-time clocks, divides to 1 Hz signal (221×1 Hz) | ||||
2.4576 | 38400 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates up to 38400. (64×38400 baud, 256×9600 baud, 2048×1200 baud) | |||
2.500 | Ethernet | Ethernet clock for 10 Mbit/s | |||
2.560 | Allows binary division to 10 kHz (28×10 kHz) | ||||
2.880 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (25×115200 baud, 300×9600 baud, 2400×1200 baud) | |||
3.072 | Allows binary division to 3 kHz (210×3 kHz); can be used to generate 60 Hz signals (51200×60 Hz) | ||||
3.088 | DS1 | 2×1.544, the bit clock for DS1 systems (±32 ppm, ANSI T1.102). Available as TCXO and OCXO. | |||
3.2768 | Allows binary division to 100 Hz (32,768×100 Hz, or 215×100 Hz) and to 50 Hz, used in e.g. wattmeters and DC-AC converters | ||||
3.575611 | PAL | PAL M color subcarrier | |||
3.579545 | NTSC | NTSC M color subcarrier; see colorburst. More specifically, 315/88 = 3.57954 MHz. Because these are very common and inexpensive they are used in many other applications, for example DTMF generators | |||
3.582056 | PAL | PAL-N color subcarrier | |||
3.595295 | NTSC | NTSC M color subcarrier, plus horizontal scan rate (15,750). Used for a rainbow color test, produces color through the entire 360 degrees of phase shift. Unusual.[3] | |||
3.64 | radio | 8×455 kHz AM broadcast band intermediate frequency; also often used in infrared remote controls as the clock source | |||
3.686400 | W-CDMA | 230400 (115200×2) |
UART clock (2×1.8432 MHz); allows integer division to common baud rates. Also used in W-CDMA systems. | ||
3.93216 | allows binary division to 60 Hz (65536×60 Hz, 216×60 Hz), used e.g. in wattmeters, DC-AC converters and NTSC vertical sync generators | ||||
4.000 | Common frequency of low-power microcontrollers. | ||||
4.032 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates (35×115,200 baud or 96×35×1,200 baud), used for 1200, 2400, and 4800 baud modems. | |||
4.096 | ISDN | Allows binary division to 1 kHz (212×1 kHz). Used in ISDN systems. | |||
4.194304 | Real-time clocks, divides to 1 Hz signal (222×1 Hz). Also found in the original Game Boy. | ||||
4.332 | RDS | 3648× the RDS signal bit rate of 1187.5 bit/s. While the frequency of 4.332 MHz is the most commonly used crystal resonator, its multiples (2×4.332 MHz = 8.664 MHz or 4×4.332 MHz = 17.328 MHz) have been used also. | |||
4.43361875 | PAL/NTSC | PAL B/D/G/H/I and NTSC M4.43 color subcarrier. Also used in Compact Disc players and recorders where the crystal frequency is slightly pulled to 4.41 MHz and then divided by 100 to give the 44.1 kHz sampling frequency. | |||
4.608 | 115200 | Allows integer division to 1024 kHz and binary division to lower frequencies that are whole multiples of 1 Hz. UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates (40×115200 baud or 40×96×1,200 baud). Common microcontroller clock frequency. Frequency of the Master Timing Unit (MTU) OCXO of the Space Shuttle.[4][5] | |||
4.8970 | Reference clock for some 315 MHz transmitters and receivers, e.g. garage door openers. (Alternative frequencies for the same chipsets: 6.0630 MHz for 390 MHz, 6.4983 MHz for 418.00 MHz, 6.7458 MHz for 433.92 MHz; swapping them can swap the band.) | ||||
4.9152 | CDMA | 38400 | Used in CDMA systems; divided to 1.2288 MHz baseband frequency as specified by J-STD-008. Also UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (128×38400 baud or 128×32×1200 baud) | ||
5.000 | Common standard frequency. Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. | ||||
5.034965 | NTSC | Integer multiple of the 59.94 Hz (84000x) vertical refresh and the 15.734 kHz (320x) horizontal scan rates | |||
5.0688 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (44×115,200 baud or 96×44×1,200 baud) | |||
5.120 | Allows binary division to 10 kHz (29×10 kHz) | ||||
5.185 | radio | Used in radio transceivers, clock for some microcontrollers | |||
5.5296 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (48×115200 baud or 48×96×1,200 baud) | |||
5.6448 | audio | Used in CD-DA systems and CD-ROM drives; allows binary division to 44.1 kHz (128×44.1 kHz), 22.05 kHz, and 11.025 kHz. Frequencies also used (multiplies of 5.6448) are 11.2896 MHz, 16.9344 MHz, 22.5972 MHz, 33.8688 MHz and 45.1584 MHz. | |||
6.000 | USB | Common in low-speed (1.5Mbit/s) USB devices such as computer keyboards. | |||
6.063 | Reference clock for some 390 MHz transmitters and receivers, e.g. garage door openers. (Alternative frequencies for the same chipsets: 4.8970 MHz for 315.00 MHz, 6.4983 MHz for 418.00 MHz, 6.7458 MHz for 433.92 MHz; swapping them can swap the band.) | ||||
6.144 | 38400 | audio | Digital audio systems - DAT, MiniDisc, sound cards; 128×48 kHz (27×48 kHz). Also allows integer division to common UART baud rates up to 38400. | ||
6.176 | DS1 | 4x 1.544, the bit clock for DS1 systems (±32 ppm, ANSI T1.102). Available as TCXO and OCXO. | |||
6.400 | Binary multiple of 100 kHz (64×100 kHz), 50 kHz, 25 kHz, 12.5 kHz. Half of the common standard 12.8 MHz. | ||||
6.451200 | 115200 | 21×307.2 kHz; UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (56×115,200 baud or 96×56×1,200 baud) | |||
6.4983 | Reference clock for some 418 MHz transmitters and receivers, e.g. TV remote extenders or wireless sensors. (Alternative frequencies for the same chipsets: 4.8970 MHz for 315.00 MHz, 6.0630 MHz for 390 MHz, 6.7458 MHz for 433.92 MHz; swapping them can swap the band.) | ||||
6.5536 | Allows binary division to 100 Hz (65,536×100 Hz, or 216×100 Hz); used also in red boxes | ||||
6.7458 | Reference clock for some 433.92 MHz ISM band transmitters and receivers, e.g. wireless sensors. (Alternative frequencies for the same chipsets: 4.8970 MHz for 315.00 MHz, 6.0630 MHz for 390 MHz, 6.4983 MHz for 418.00 MHz; swapping them can swap the band.) Available as TCXO. | ||||
7.023 | Amateur Radio | CW Paradise in China, A common QRP Frequency.[6] | |||
7.15909 | NTSC | NTSC M color subcarrier (2×3.579545 MHz) | |||
7.200 | DARC | 57600 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates (125×57,600 baud or 125×48×1,200 baud). Half of the more common 14.4 MHz. Reference clock for DARC. | ||
7.3728 | 460800 (115200×4) |
UART clock (4×1.8432 MHz); allows integer division to common baud rates | |||
7.600 | radio | PLL clock for pilot tone (400x19 kHz) in FM stereo. | |||
8.000 | CAN | Used in CAN bus systems | |||
8.184 | GPS | Half the 16.368 MHz frequency; same use in different chipsets. 8 times the 1.023 MHz C/A GPS signal chipping rate. Multiplied by 192.5 to get the 1575.42 MHz L1 frequency and multiplied by 150 to get the 1227.60 MHz L2 frequency. | |||
8.192 | ISDN | Allows binary division to 1 kHz (213×1 kHz). Used in ISDN systems. | |||
8.4672 | 115200 | audio | Used in CD-DA systems and CD-ROM drives; allows integer division to 44.1 kHz (192×44.1 kHz), 22.05 kHz, and 11.025 kHz. Also allows integer division to common UART baud rates up to 115200. Frequencies also used are 11.2896 MHz, 16.9344 MHz, 22.5972 MHz, 33.8688 MHz and 45.1584 MHz. | ||
8.664 | RDS | The RDS signal bit rate is at 1.1875 kbit/s. While the frequency of 4.332 MHz is the most commonly used crystal resonator, its multiples (2×4.332 MHz = 8.664 MHz or 4×4.332 MHz = 17.328 MHz) have been used also. | |||
8.86724 | PAL | PAL B/G/H color subcarrier (2×4.433618 MHz) | |||
9.216 | 115200 | Allows integer division to 1024 kHz and binary division to lower frequencies that are whole multiples of 1 Hz. UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates (80×115200 baud or 80×96×1,200 baud). Master clock for some Japanese variants of DOCSIS. | |||
9.54545 | NTSC | 2/3 of the 14.31818 MHz NTSC clock, 1/3 of the 28.636 MHz clock; common clock for microcontrollers and older processors. Exactly 210/22 MHz. | |||
9.600 | 38400 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (250×38,400 baud or 250×32×1,200 baud). Available as TCXO and OCXO. Used in 19.2 and 48 MHz PLL generators. Can be used as seed clock for 48 and 60 GHz PLL oscillators and in frequency synthetizers for mobile radio as the common channel spacings can be easily derived.[7] | |||
9.8304 | CDMA | 38400 | Used in CDMA systems (2×4.9152 MHz); divided to 1.2288 MHz baseband frequency. Also UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (256×38,400 baud or 256×32×1,200 baud) | ||
10.000 | Common standard frequency. Common frequency of low-power microcontrollers. Commonly available as TCXO, the most common OCXO and GPS-disciplined oscillator available. Common stratum 3 Network Time Protocol frequency.[8] | ||||
10.2300 | GPS | Found in some GPS receivers. Equals the P(Y) GPS signal chipping rate. 10 times the 1.023 MHz C/A GPS signal chipping rate. Multiplied by 154 to get the 1575.42 MHz L1 frequency and multiplied by 120 to get the 1227.60 MHz L2 frequency. Available as OCXO and TCXO. | |||
10.24 | Allows binary division to 10 kHz (210×10 kHz). Common as a clock in CB radio PLL frequency synthesizers to generate the 5 kHz or 10 kHz reference signal.[9] Used in frequency synthesizers in some cordless phones and in many radio frequency transceivers. Master clock for DOCSIS/EuroDOCSIS. Used in cable modem termination systems. Used to derive symbol and chip rate in conventional TD-SCDMA systems. Available as OCXO and TCXO. | ||||
10.245 | FM radio | Used in radio receivers; mixes with 10.7 MHz intermediate frequency (IF) yielding 455 kHz signal, a common second IF for FM radio[10] | |||
10.368 | DECT | Reference clock for DECT phones. Available as TCXO. Other frequencies are 13.824 and 20.736 MHz. | |||
10.416667 | Ethernet | Multiplied by 12 to 125 MHz Gigabit Ethernet GMII GTXCLK clock, FDDI clock | |||
11.0592 | 115200 | UART clock (6×1.8432 MHz); allows integer division to common baud rates (96×115200 baud or 96×96×1,200 baud); common clock for Intel 8051 microprocessors[11] | |||
11.2896 | audio | Used in CD-DA systems and CD-ROM drives; allows binary division to 44.1 kHz (256×44.1 kHz), 22.05 kHz, and 11.025 kHz. Frequencies also used are 16.9344 MHz, 22.5972 MHz, 33.8688 MHz and 45.1584 MHz. | |||
11.454544 | teletext | Used in some teletext circuits; 2×5.727272 MHz (clock frequency of NTSC M teletext; PAL B uses 6.9375 MHz, SECAM uses 6.203125 MHz, PAL G uses 6.2031 MHz, and PAL I uses 4.4375 MHz clock) | |||
11.520 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (100×115,200 baud or 100×96×1,200 baud) | |||
12.000 | USB/CAN | Used in USB 1.0 and 2.0 systems (with accuracy of 500 ppm) as the reference clock for the full-speed PHY rate of 12 Mbit/s, or multiplied up using a PLL to clock high speed PHYs at 480 Mbit/s; common clock for Intel 8051 microprocessors;[11] also used in CAN bus systems. | |||
12.272727 | Clock rate for exactly square pixels in interleaved NTSC video ( MHz). In practice the more commonly available 12.288 MHz frequency is close enough for most applications. | ||||
12.288 | 38400 | audio | Digital audio systems - DAT, MiniDisc, sound cards; 256×48 kHz (28×48 kHz). Also allows integer division to common UART baud rates up to 38400. | ||
12.352 | DS1 | 8x 1.544, the bit clock for DS1 systems (±32 ppm, ANSI T1.102). Available as TCXO and OCXO. | |||
12.40625 | teletext | Used in some teletext circuits; 2×6.203125 MHz (clock frequency of SECAM teletext; PAL B uses 6.9375 MHz, NTSC M uses 5.727272 MHz, PAL G uses 6.2031 MHz, and PAL I uses 4.4375 MHz clock) | |||
12.800 | Common standard frequency, common reference clock; binary multiple of 100 kHz (128×100 kHz), 50 kHz, 25 kHz, 12.5 kHz. Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. Common stratum 3 frequency.[8] | ||||
12.9024 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (112×115200 baud or 112×96×1,200 baud) | |||
12.960 | 57600 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (225×57600 baud or 225×48×1,200 baud) | |||
13.000 | GSM/UMTS | Commonly used as a reference clock for GSM and UMTS handsets. (13 MHz is exactly 48 times the GSM bit rate). Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. | |||
13.500 | PAL/NTSC | Master clock for PAL/NTSC DVD players, Digital TV receivers, etc. (13.5 MHz is an exact multiple of the PAL and NTSC line frequencies) | |||
13.5168 | 38400 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (352×38400 baud or 352×32×1,200 baud) | |||
13.56 | RFID | Common contactless smartcard frequency (ISO/IEC 14443) | |||
13.824 | DECT | Reference clock for DECT phones. Available as TCXO. Other frequencies are 10.368 and 20.736 MHz. | |||
13.875 | teletext | Used in some teletext circuits; 2×6.9375 MHz (clock frequency of PAL B teletext; SECAM uses 6.203125 MHz, NTSC M uses 5.727272 MHz, PAL G uses 6.2031 MHz, and PAL I uses 4.4375 MHz clock) | |||
14.112 | 19200 | audio | Digital audio systems - 294×48 kHz, 320x44.1 kHz. Also allows integer division to common UART baud rates up to 19200. Available as TCXO. | ||
14.25 | FM radio | PAL | used as sampling frequency for ADCs for digitizing the 10.7 MHz intermediate frequency in software defined radio implementations of AM/FM radio receivers.[12] Pixel clock of some PAL CCD cameras.[13] Used in PAL version in some early Apple computers, e.g. Apple II Europlus. | ||
14.31818 | NTSC | NTSC M color subcarrier (4×3.579545 MHz). Common seed clock for modern PC motherboard clock generator chips, clock for ISA bus, also common on CGA and VGA cards and in some 8-bit computers. Exactly 315/22 MHz. | |||
14.35 | NTSC | Pixel clock of some NTSC CCD cameras.[13] | |||
14.400 | PDC | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates (125×115,200 baud or 125×96×1,200 baud). Also a reference clock for PDC clock. Reference clock of some consumer GPS receivers.[14] | ||
14.7456 | 921600 (115200×8) |
UART clock (8×1.8432 MHz); allows integer division to common baud rates; common clock for small microcontrollers | |||
14.75 | Clock rate for exactly square pixels in interleaved PAL video ( MHz). In practice the more commonly available 14.7456 MHz frequency is close enough for most applications. | ||||
14.85 | Used in some transceivers and cellular radios as a reference clock for frequency synthesis. Available as TCXO. | ||||
15.000 | Used as clock in ZX8301 computer (divided to 7.5 MHz). Frequency used in photoacoustic imaging. Sometimes available as OCXO. | ||||
15.360 | 3G | 38400 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates (400×38400 baud or 400×32×1,200 baud). Also used as a 3G reference clock.[15] Used as reference clock in some Bluetooth systems. | ||
15.600 | Used in Kenwood TS-590 transceivers. Available as TCXO. | ||||
16.000 | CAN | Used in CAN bus systems, some USB devices. 2.4 GHz ISM transceivers. | |||
16.200 | Sampling clock for MUSE HDTV systems. Rarely used as reference clock in some Bluetooth systems. | ||||
16.257 | EGA | Pixel clock generator in MGA and EGA video cards (640x350@60 Hz)[16] | |||
16.3676 16.367667 16.3680 |
GPS | Commonly used for down-conversion and sampling in GPS-receivers. Generates intermediate frequency signal at 4.092 MHz. 16.3676 or 16.367667 MHz are sometimes used instead of 16.368 MHz to avoid perfect lineup between sampling frequency and GPS spreading code. 16.368 MHz is a reference clock of some consumer GPS receivers.[14] 16.368 MHz is 16 times the 1.023 MHz C/A GPS signal chipping rate; multiplied by 96.25 to get the 1575.42 MHz L1 frequency and multiplied by 75 to get the 1227.60 MHz L2 frequency. | |||
16.369 | GPS | Reference clock for some GPS systems. Available as TCXO.[17] | |||
16.384 | Allows binary division to 1 kHz (214×1 kHz). Reference clock of some consumer GPS receivers.[14] Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. | ||||
16.5888 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (144×115200 baud or 144×96×1,200 baud) | |||
16.67 | Core speed of some microcomputers (relatively common in Motorola 68000 family); bus clock; double to 33.33 MHz, quadruple to 66.67 MHz, multiply by 6 to 100 MHz; IOAPIC clock speed, half the PCI bus frequency | ||||
16.800 | 19200 | Common standard reference frequency for PLL circuits in radio transmitters and receivers, commonly used for frequency synthesis with adjustment in 2.5, 5 or 6.25 kHz steps (6720×5 kHz, 3360×5 kHz or 2688×5.25 kHz). Also UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates (500×33600 baud or 500×28×1,200 baud). Commonly available as TCXO, VCXO and VCTCXO. Used as reference clock in some Bluetooth systems. Used as reference clock in some Bluetooth systems. Reference clock for some GPS systems.[17] | |||
16.9344 | 115200 | audio | Used in CD-DA systems and CD-ROM drives; allows integer division to 44.1 kHz (384×44.1 kHz), 22.05 kHz, and 11.025 kHz. Also allows integer division to common UART baud rates up to 115200. Frequencies also used are 11.2896 MHz, 22.5972 MHz, 33.8688 MHz and 45.1584 MHz. | ||
17.2032 | USB | audio | PLL conversion by 10/7 to 24.576 MHz and by 21/16 = 22.5792 MHz, which are 256× audio sampling frequencies 48 kHz and 44.1 kHz, respectively.[18] | ||
17.328 | RDS | The RDS signal bit rate is at 1.1875 kbit/s. While the frequency of 4.332 MHz is the most commonly used crystal resonator, its multiples (2×4.332 MHz = 8.664 MHz or 4×4.332 MHz = 17.328 MHz) have been used also. | |||
17.664 | DSL | 38400 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (32×552000 baud, 128×138000 baud, 460×38400 baud or 460×32×1,200 baud); DSL clock: 17.664 MHz (VDSL) ... 8×2.208 MHz (ADSL ADC sampling rate) | ||
17.734475 | PAL | PAL B/G/H color subcarrier (4×4.433618 MHz) | |||
18.432 | 115200 | audio | X | UART clock (10×1.8432 MHz); allows integer division to all common baud rates. Also allows integer division to 48 kHz (384×48 kHz), 96 kHz, and 192 kHz sample rates used in high-end digital audio. | |
18.816 | 33600 | audio/DAT | Double the master channel bitrate clock. 9.408 MHz, of Digital Audio Tape systems; 392x48 kHz. The 9.408 MHz clock is divided by 72, 18, 12, and 6 to obtain the pilot, first sync frequency, second sync frequency, and erase frequency. Available as TCXO. | ||
18.9375 | PAL | common CCIR/PAL CCTV camera clock frequency | |||
19.069929 | NTSC | common EIA/NTSC CCTV camera clock frequency, also 19.06993, 19.06992 and 19.0699 MHz | |||
19.200 | 3G | 38400 | DVB | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates (500×38,400 baud or 500×32×1,200 baud). Also used as a 3G reference clock, due to being a least common multiple of W-CDMA chip rate 3.84 MHz (5x) and 200 kHz channel raster (96x).[15] Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. Also used in some DVB receiver chipsets. Reference clock of some consumer GPS receivers.[14] Used as reference clock in some Bluetooth systems. Common stratum 3 frequency.[8] | |
19.440 | DS1/T1/E1 | Used in DS1/T1/E1 systems as a packet clock. Used as reference clock in some Bluetooth systems. Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. | |||
19.6608 | CDMA | 38400 | Used in CDMA systems (4×4.9152); divided to 1.2288 MHz baseband frequency; UART clock, allows integer division to common baud rates (512×38400, 1024×19200, etc.) | ||
19.6800 | CDMA | 19200 | Used in CDMA(IS-95)/CDMA2000 systems; divided to 1.2288 MHz baseband frequency;UART clock, allows integer division to common baud rates (1025×19200, 1025×16×1200, etc.) Used as reference clock in some Bluetooth systems. Commonly available as TCXO. | ||
19.800 | CDMA | Used in some CDMA systems. Used as reference clock in some Bluetooth systems. | |||
20.000 | Ethernet | 10 Mbit/s ethernet. Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. Common stratum 3 Network Time Protocol frequency.[8] | |||
20.25 | TV/MAC | PAL/NTSC | Common sampling rate of luma+chroma video components in the Multiplexed Analogue Components standard. | ||
20.2752 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (176×115200 baud or 176×96×1,200 baud) | |||
20.480 | Allows binary division to 10 kHz (211×10 kHz). Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. | ||||
20.736 | DECT | Reference clock for DECT phones. Available as TCXO. Other frequencies are 10.368 and 13.824 MHz. | |||
21.47727 | NTSC | NTSC M color subcarrier (6×3.579545 MHz). Common seed clock for many older computer systems, e.g. the NTSC-region NES, divided by 12 to CPU clock (1.789773 MHz); see 26.601712 MHz for PAL NES systems.[19] | |||
22.1184 | 115200 | UART clock (12×1.8432 MHz); allows integer division to common baud rates, including 921600 and above. Twice the 11.0592 MHz frequency. | |||
22.5792 | audio | Used in CD-DA systems and CD-ROM drives; allows binary division to 44.1 kHz (512×44.1 kHz), 22.05 kHz, and 11.025 kHz. Frequencies also used are 11.2896 MHz, 16.9344 MHz, 33.8688 MHz and 45.1584 MHz. | |||
22.625 | Used in Yaesu FT-817, FT-857, and FT-897 transceiver. Available as TCXO. | ||||
23.104 | GPS | Reference clock for some GPS systems. Available as TCXO.[17] | |||
23.9616 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (208×115200 baud or 208×96×1,200 baud) | |||
24 | USB Bluetooth headphones | High-speed USB (24 MHz × 20 = 480Mbit/s); LCD monitor some MCU also Bluetooth headphones | |||
24.5535 | GPS | Reference clock for some GPS systems. Available as TCXO.[17] Almost 24 times the 1.023 MHz C/A code chipping rate. | |||
24.576 | Firewire | 38400 | audio | Digital audio systems - DAT, MiniDisc, AC'97, sound cards; 512×48 kHz (29×48 kHz); also used as bus reference clock in Firewire systems (with accuracy of 100 ppm). 49.1520 MHz (2x 24.576) also used. | |
24.704 | DS1 | 16x 1.544, the bit clock for DS1 systems (±32 ppm, ANSI T1.102). Available as TCXO and OCXO. | |||
25.000 | Ethernet | Fast Ethernet MII clock (100 Mbit/s/4-bit nibble) (with accuracy of 100 ppm); also multiplied by 5 to 125 MHz Gigabit Ethernet GMII GTXCLK clock, FDDI clock; used as input for 100 MHz PCI Express clock generators[20] | |||
25.175 | VGA | Common Video Graphics Array pixel clock (i.e., 640x350@70 Hz,640x400@70 Hz, 640x480@60 Hz)[21] | |||
25.8048 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (224×115200 baud or 224×96×1,200 baud) | |||
26.000 | GSM/UMTS | DVB | Commonly used as a reference clock for GSM and UMTS/3G handsets. (26 MHz is exactly 96 times the GSM bit rate). Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO.[15] Also used in some DVB receiver chipsets. Reference clock of some consumer GPS receivers.[14] Used in Long-CZ phones and some Bluetooth dongles. | ||
26.2144 | Popular for 102.4 kS/s, 204.8 kS/s or similar sampling systems, when a power-of-two size FFT follows the sampling. In this case the FFT frequency bins end up to be at "nice" frequencies for humans. Also allows integer division to 25 Hz and multiples of 25 Hz (50 Hz, 100 Hz, 200 Hz); 26.2144 MHz = 100 x 218 = 25 x 220. | ||||
26.5625 | Fibre Channel | quadrupled to 106.250 MHz Fibre Channel clock | |||
26.601712 | PAL | 6x the 4.43361875 color subcarrier frequency; clock crystal of the PAL region NES consoles, divided by 16 to CPU clock (1.662607 MHz), see 21.47727 MHz for NTSC region systems[19] | |||
26.8436 | Digital signal generator | Exact frequency is 2^28/10 Hz. Used to drive a DDS synthesizer with 28-bit accumulator; gives output from 0 to about 3 MHz in 0.1 Hz steps. Instek SFG-1000 series is one example. | |||
26.975 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 0/1 (grey/brown), "split" frequency; radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft[22] | |||
26.995 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 1 (brown); radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft | |||
27.000 | PAL/NTSC | Master clock for PAL/NTSC DVD players, Digital TV receivers, some modems etc. (27 MHz is an exact multiple of the PAL and NTSC line frequencies) | |||
27.025 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 1/2 (brown/red), "split" frequency; radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft | |||
27.045 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 2 (red); some radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft | |||
27.075 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 2/3 (red/orange), "split" frequency; radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft | |||
27.095 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 3 (orange); some radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft | |||
27.12 | RFID | Twice 13.56 MHz, common contactless smartcard frequency (ISO/IEC 14443) | |||
27.125 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 3/4 (orange/yellow), "split" frequency; radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft; common crystal in vintage walkie talkies | |||
27.145 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 4 (yellow); some radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft; gate and garage door remote controls; toy walkie talkies;[23] between channels 15 and 16 of the CB radio | |||
27.175 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 4/5 (yellow/green), "split" frequency; radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft | |||
27.195 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 5 (green); radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft | |||
27.225 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 5/6 (green/blue), "split" frequency; radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft | |||
27.255 | RC | 27 MHz band, band 6 (blue); some radio-controlled models of cars, boats, aircraft | |||
27.4560 | GPS | Reference clock for some GPS systems. Available as TCXO.[17] | |||
27.6480 | DECT | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (240×115200 baud or 240×96×1,200 baud) Twice the 13.824 MHz of DECT master clock. | ||
28.224 | modems | 115200 | audio | used in some faxes and modems; UART clock, allows integer division to common baud rates (245×115200, 512×38400, 1024×19200, etc.) and to modem and fax rates (504×56000, 580×48000, 840×33600, 980×28800, 1960×14400, 2352×12000, etc.); also divides to common audio frequencies (147×192000, 588×48000, 640×44100, 1280×22050, 2560×11025) | |
28.322 | VGA | Common Video Graphics Array pixel clock (i.e., 720x450/400@70 Hz)[24] | |||
28.375 | PAL | Master clock for some PAL CCD cameras; 2 periods per pixel, 1816 periods per scan line, 567500 periods per frame. With frequency of 28.37516 video clock for all PAL Amiga computers. | |||
28.636363 | NTSC | Master clock for some NTSC CCD cameras. Video clock for all NTSC Amiga computers. Twice the 14.31818 MHz frequency, shares its other uses, e.g. seed clock of PC ISA bus. Exactly 315/11 MHz. 8×3.598545 MHz of the NTSC colorburst. Used in some microcontroller based NTSC console emulators. See 35.46895 MHz for corresponding PAL systems.[25] | |||
28.800 | 230400 | DVB-T | Used in some DVB-T USB dongle TV receivers, namely the RTL-SDR ones used for software-defined radio. Available as TCXO. | ||
29.4912 | 1843200 (115200×16) |
UART clock (16×1.8432 MHz); allows integer division to common baud rates (256x115200) | |||
30.000 | common CPU clock | ||||
30.240 | VGA | Early Macintosh video pixel clock (640x480@66 Hz)[24] | |||
30.720 | 3G | 38400 | A 3G reference clock; twice the 15.36 MHz, 8x the 3.84 MHz WCDMA chip rate. Reference clock in W-CDMA systems; can be multiplied by 16 to 491.52 MHz common for driving DACs in WCDMA wireless base stations or by 32 to 983.04 MHz for UMTS base stations or by 8 to 245.76 MHz, other common DAC sampling frequency.[26] UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates (800×38400 baud or 800×32×1,200 baud). Available as VCXO, TCXO and OCXO. | ||
31.3344 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (272×115200 baud or 272×96×1,200 baud) | |||
32.768 | Allows binary division to 1 kHz (215×1 kHz). Reference clock of some consumer GPS receivers. Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. | ||||
33.1776 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (288×115200 baud or 288×96×1,200 baud) | |||
33.33 | common CPU clock, PCI bus clock | ||||
33.8688 | 115200 | audio | Used in CD-DA systems and CD-ROM drives; allows integer division to 44.1 kHz (768×44.1 kHz), 22.05 kHz, and 11.025 kHz. Also allows integer division to common UART baud rates up to 115200. Available as a TCXO. Frequencies also used are 11.2896 MHz, 16.9344 MHz, 22.5972 MHz and 45.1584 MHz. | ||
34.368 | E3 | 38400 | E3 data rate clock. UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (895×38400 baud or 895×32×1200 baud) | ||
34.950 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 55; radio-controlled models of aircraft[27] | |||
34.960 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 56; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
34.970 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 57; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
34.980 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 58; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
34.990 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 59; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.000 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 60; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.010 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 61; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.020 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 62; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.0208 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (304×115200 baud or 304×96×1,200 baud) | |||
35.030 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 63; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.040 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 64; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.050 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 65; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.060 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 66; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.070 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 67; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.080 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 68; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.090 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 69; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.100 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 70; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.110 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 71; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.120 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 72; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.130 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 73; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.140 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 74; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.150 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 75; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.160 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 76; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.170 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 77; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.180 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 78; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.190 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 79; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.200 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 80; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.210 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 81; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.220 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 82; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.230 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 83; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.240 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 84; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.250 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 85; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.2512 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (306×115200 baud or 306×96×1,200 baud) | |||
35.260 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 86; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.270 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 87; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.280 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 88; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.290 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 89; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.300 | RC | 35 MHz band, channel 90; radio-controlled models of aircraft | |||
35.3280 | DSL | 38400 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (64×552000 baud, 256×138000 baud, 460×38400 baud or 460×32×1,200 baud); DSL clock: 2×17.664 MHz (VDSL) ... 16×2.208 MHz (ADSL ADC sampling rate) | ||
35.46895 | PAL | Also 35.468 MHz. 8×4.43361875 MHz of the PAL colorburst (color subcarrier). Used in some microcontroller based PAL console emulators.
See 28.6363 MHz for the corresponding NTSC systems.[25] | |||
36.000 | VGA | Video Graphics Array pixel clock for 800x600@56 Hz[24] | |||
36.8640 | 115200 | X | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (320×115200 baud or 320×96×1,200 baud) | ||
38.400 | 3G | 38400 | DVB | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates (500×38,400 baud or 500×32×1,200 baud). Also used as a 3G reference clock, due to being a second (2×19.2 MHz) least common multiple of W-CDMA chip rate 3.84 MHz (5x) and 200 kHz channel raster (96x).[15] Also used in some DVB receiver chipsets. Used as reference clock in some Bluetooth systems. | |
38.88 | DS1/T1/E1 | Used in DS1/T1/E1 systems as a packet clock (2×19.44 MHz). Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. | |||
39.000 | GSM/UMTS | 3x13 MHz. Commonly used as a reference clock for GSM and UMTS handsets. (39 MHz is exactly 144 times the GSM bit rate). Available as TCXO. | |||
40.000 | common CPU clock, WiFi, OFDM. FPU oscillator for Commodore A3630 card and found in dual band miniPCIe WiFi cards. | ||||
40.320 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (350×115200 baud or 350×96×1,200 baud) | |||
40.655 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 50; radio-controlled models of cars, boats[28] | |||
40.665 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 66; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.675 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 51; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.680 | common crystal in garage door remotes and other remote controls | ||||
40.685 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 52; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.695 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 53; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.705 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 70; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.715 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 54; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.725 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 55; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.735 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 56; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.745 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 74; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.755 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 75; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.765 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 57; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.775 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 58; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.775 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 77; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.785 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 59; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.795 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 79; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.805 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 80; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.815 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 81; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.825 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 82; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.835 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 83; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.875 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 85; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.885 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 86; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.915 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 87; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.935 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 93; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.945 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 94; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.960 | Allows binary division to 10 kHz (212×10 kHz) | ||||
40.975 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 91; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.985 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 92; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
40.985 | RC | 40 MHz band, channel 98; radio-controlled models of cars, boats | |||
44.736 | DS3 | 38400 | DS3 data rate clock. UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (1165×38400 baud or 1165×32×1200 baud) | ||
45.1584 | 115200 | audio | Used in CD-DA systems and CD-ROM drives; allows binary division to 44.1 kHz (1024×44.1 kHz), 22.05 kHz, and 11.025 kHz. Also allows integer division to common UART baud rates up to 115200. Available as a TCXO. Frequencies also used are 11.2896 MHz, 16.9344 MHz, 22.5972 MHz and 33.8688 MHz. | ||
48.000 | USB | VGA | found in old VGA cards,[29] High-speed USB (48 MHz × 10 = 480Mbit/s) | ||
49.1520 | Firewire | audio | Digital audio systems - DAT, MiniDisc, AC'97, sound cards; 1024×48 kHz (210×48 kHz); also used as bus reference clock in Firewire systems (with accuracy of 100 ppm). Twice the more-standard frequency of 24.576 MHz. Available as TCXO. | ||
49.408 | DS1 | 32x 1.544, the bit clock for DS1 systems (±32 ppm, ANSI T1.102). | |||
49.830 49.860 49.890 |
RC | toy remote controls, walkie-talkies | |||
50.000 | Ethernet | Fast Ethernet (2×25 MHz), VGA pixel clock for 800x600@72 Hz;[24] PCI Express clock source, doubled to 100 MHz. Amigakit ZorRAM memory cards. | |||
51.840 | SONET | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (450×115200 baud or 450×96×1,200 baud); SONET STS-1 frequency (with accuracy of 20 =ppm)[20] | ||
52.416 | modems | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (455×115200 baud or 455×96×1,200 baud) and to modem and fax rates (936×56000, 1092×48000, 1560×33600, 1820×28800, 3640×14400, 4368×12000, etc.); also divides to some common audio frequencies (273×192000, 1092×48000) | ||
53.125 | Fibre Channel | Fibre Channel clock | |||
56.448 | modems | 115200 | 2×28.224 MHz; used in some faxes and modems; UART clock, allows integer division to common baud rates (490×115200, 1024×38400, 2048×19200, etc.) and to modem and fax rates (1008×56000, 1160×48000, 1680×33600, 1960×28800, 3920×14400, 4704×12000, etc.); also divides to common audio frequencies (294×192000, 1176×48000, 1280×44100, 2560×22050, 5120×11025) | ||
66.667 | common CPU clock, PCI bus clock | ||||
70.656 | DSL | 38400 | (2x 35.328) UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (128×552000 baud, 512×138000 baud, 920×38400 baud or 920×32×1,200 baud);DSL clock: 4×17.664 MHz (VDSL) ... 32×2.208 MHz (ADSL ADC sampling rate) | ||
77.760 | 115200 | UART clock; allows integer division to common baud rates. (675×115200 baud or 675×96×1,200 baud). Commonly available as TCXO and OCXO. | |||
80.000 | audio | common CPU clock; used in some audio applications, available as TCXO. | |||
100.000 | PCI Express clock.[30] Standard frequency, available as OCXO. | ||||
106.250 | Fibre Channel | Fibre Channel clock for 1.0625 gigabaud rate | |||
106.5 | radio | Used as an IF LO in microwave transceivers, e.g. on the amateur 10 GHz band. Multiplied by 96 to produce 10.224 GHz signal. Available as OCXO. | |||
116 | radio | Used as an IF LO in 144 MHz transverters. Available as TCXO. Sometimes used as GPS-disciplined OCXO. | |||
125.000 | Ethernet | Gigabit Ethernet GMII GTXCLK clock, FDDI clock | |||
155.520 | SONET/SDH | 3×51.840 MHz (SONET STS-1 frequency), SONET/SDH clock | |||
156.25 | Ethernet | 10 Gigabit Ethernet clock, 64-bit signal[31][32] | |||
161.1328 | Ethernet | 10 Gigabit Ethernet clock, 66-bit signal[31][32] |
See also
References
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-05-16. Retrieved 2015-04-26.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|dead-url=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Bulova[circular reference]
- ^ Weitzman, Barry (March 16, 2008). "strange xtal frequencies". cctalk (Mailing list). Archived from the original on October 5, 2014.
- ^ Instrumentation Archived 2010-09-11 at the Wayback Machine. (PDF) . Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ D19 - Sensor Data. (PDF) . Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ http://www.eham.net/ehamforum/smf/index.php?topic=66440.msg433549#msg433549
- ^ http://pira.cz/pdf/UMA1014.pdf
- ^ a b c d QuickView - DS4026 10MHz to 51.84MHz TCXO. Maxim-ic.com. Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ CB Radio Frequency Synthesis explanation. Glodark.co.uk. Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ TSCM Handbook - Chapter 5. Dbugman.com. Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ a b 8051 Tutorial: Instruction Set, Timing, and Low-Level Information. 8052.com. Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ Blaupunkt digiceiver technology Archived 2009-07-08 at the Wayback Machine. Bluespot.co.uk. Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ a b CV-M50.indd Archived 2011-07-13 at the Wayback Machine Industrial Monochrome CCD Camera
- ^ a b c d e UPB1009K NEC’s low power GPS RF receiver bipolar analog + integrated circuit
- ^ a b c d Clock Interface Trends from GSM/EDGE to W-CDMA Archived 2010-02-15 at the Wayback Machine Gary Levy, Silicon Laboratories Inc.
- ^ http://neil.franklin.ch/Projects/SoftVGA/Design/Video_Signals
- ^ a b c d e SMD TCXO/VCTCXO for GPS Applications
- ^ "Achieving Bit-Perfect USB Audio". electronicdesign.com. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
- ^ a b https://wiki.nesdev.com/w/index.php/Clock_rate
- ^ a b "Using clock generation chips to replace crystals and oscillators". Archived from the original on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2009-12-24.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|dead-url=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ VGA Signal Timing
- ^ Jatech Limited. "Radio Control Systems, Receivers and Crystals 27Mhz & 40Mhz , 27Mhz Crystals | Antics Online". Rccarsandtrucks.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2008-12-12. Retrieved 2010-06-05.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ https://interferencetechnology.com/disney-walkie-talkies-pick-crude-trucker-conversation/
- ^ a b c d VGA timing information. Martin.hinner.info. Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ a b https://rossumblog.com/2015/09/15/arduinocade/
- ^ "de beste bron van informatie over open base station.Deze website is te koop!". Openbasestation.org. Archived from the original on 2008-12-01. Retrieved 2010-06-05.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|dead-url=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Jatech Limited. "Radio Control Systems, Receivers & Crystals for 35Mhz Radio, 35MHz Crystals | Antics Online". Rccarsandtrucks.co.uk. Retrieved 2010-06-05.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Jatech Limited. "Radio Control Systems, Receivers and Crystals 27Mhz & 40Mhz , 40Mhz Crystals | Antics Online". Rccarsandtrucks.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2009-08-13. Retrieved 2010-06-05.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Low Power Multiband Beacon. Qsl.net. Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ Maxim Integrated Products First 100 MHz, HCSL-output crystal oscillator for PCI Express. Mobiledevdesign.com (2008-03-20). Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ a b SiTime Intros Oscillator for 10 Gigabit Ethernet Applications. Dark-fiber.tmcnet.com (2009-07-29). Retrieved on 2010-02-08.
- ^ a b Pld architecture optimized for 10g ethernet physical layer solution Archived 2012-02-29 at the Wayback Machine. Freshpatents.com. Retrieved on 2010-02-08.