Built a three-inverter ring oscillator on solderless breadboard using Fairchild DTL 949 NAND gate from 1968; unused input are tied to Vcc and output is buffered with the remaining NAND gate. Operates around 10.3MHz.
Minimum and maxumum propagation delays are specified in datasheets as design limits across the complete temperature and voltage range of operation, and usually with a high load. Typical propagation delays tend to be much less and thus you see this kind of variation.
Read this a while back and found it again from a search. Wikipedia says the frequency for a 3-gate ring should be the reciprocal of 6 " gate delay. 10 MHz mplies a gate delay of 16 ns. According to the datasheet I have the propagation delay is 25 ns. But I expect discrepancy as DTL rise and fall times are asymmetric; the Wiki example uses CMOS gates.
Reason I'm looking is I have some 846 quad NAND gates with 30 ns delay (6k instead of 2k pull-ups). Have to wire them up to see if I get a predicted 8 MHz. Need to get hold of a frequency meter. Must do something with those idle ancient chips!
Minimum and maxumum propagation delays are specified in datasheets as design limits across the complete temperature and voltage range of operation, and usually with a high load. Typical propagation delays tend to be much less and thus you see this kind of variation.