FCC Exam Question: 3-40E1
What is the purpose of a prescaler circuit?
Explanation: A prescaler circuit serves a crucial role in frequency measurement, particularly for high-frequency (HF) signals. Standard digital frequency counters have an upper limit to the frequency they can directly count due to the speed limitations of their internal logic gates. The purpose of a prescaler is to **divide an HF signal** down to a lower, more manageable frequency that the counter can accurately process. For example, if you have a 1 GHz signal, a prescaler might divide it by 100, yielding a 10 MHz signal. This 10 MHz signal can then be fed into a conventional frequency counter. The counter displays 10 MHz, and the user knows to multiply that reading by 100 to get the original 1 GHz operating frequency. Let's look at why the other options are incorrect: * **A) Converts the output of a JK flip-flop to that of an RS flip-flop.** While prescalers are built using flip-flops, their *purpose* is frequency division, not logic gate conversion. * **B) Multiplies an HF signal so a low-frequency counter can display the operating frequency.** This is the opposite of a prescaler's function. Multiplying an already high frequency would make it even harder for a low-frequency counter to measure. * **C) Prevents oscillation in a low frequency counter circuit.** Preventing oscillation is typically handled by proper circuit design, grounding, and decoupling, not by a prescaler, which is a frequency divider.
3-45F4
3-76L1
3-91O5
3-68K2
3-56G2
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Includes Elements 1, 3, 6, 7R, 8, and 9.