Digital receivers for high bit-rate communications are spurring on the required conversion rate of A/D converters. State-of-theart disk drive read channels and high-speed Ethernet signals use partial response signaling, requiring 6b resolution at conversion rates of 1GHz and beyond, and an effective resolution bandwidth of half the Nyquist frequency. Furthermore, continuous DVD playback and certain Ethernet uses permit no idle times when the linearity of the A/D converter may be self-calibrated by autozeroing. This work reports on a 6b ADC without autozero or selfcalibration, which digitizes a 630MHz input with a linearity of 5.5 effective bits at 1GSample/s, and a 650MHz input with 5 effective bits at 1.3GSample/s. At conversion rates of 1GSample/s and beyond, the only practical architecture to date is the flash ADC. As MOSFETs in the preamplifiers are sized up to lower random mismatch to resolve a typical full-scale of 1.6V to 6b, the power consumption and input capacitance also grow to a point that the ADC may no longer be readily embedded in a receiver chip. This ADC uses resistor averaging in two places to filter out random mismatch between arrays of differential pairs, substantially improving the accuracy of small MOSFETs which bias at a small current and present low input capacitance. Previous work [1] presents a systematic method to design averaging networks based on spatial filtering. With the proper number of dummy preamplifiers at each end of the array, the optimum averaging network lowers INL by 3.3x. To obtain the same linearity without averaging, FET W/L, and therefore power dissipation, must be scaled by 10x.