I don't know if this still hold true, but every crystal oscillator circuit usually has a capacitor in parallel with the crystal. Is there something missing here?
http://electronicdesign.com/analog/fundamentals-crystal-oscillator-design
A different load capacitance will produce the wrong frequency.
4. The load capacitance is the capacitance “seen” across the crystal’s terminals, exclusive of the internal shunt capacitance.
Two caps in parallel sums the amount of total capacitance. Even tho the varactor is a diode, it is acting as a variable capacitor when the voltage to it is reduced or increased. That circuit I posted above is the Loop Osc, which means that is the circuit that will shift freq up or down with the clarifier control pot. Right?
So if that one cap is removed, there will be less capacitance transferring loop RF. Guess the point that Xit13 is making, is that by removing some capacitance and reducing the amount of capacitance with a different varactor diode, there is less capacitance to move the freq up or down.
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