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Old May 1st 10, 09:07 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
Fred McKenzie Fred McKenzie is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 317
Default HP 5245L Counter Oscillator adjust?

In article ,
Scott wrote:

I measure the signal coming out the back of the counter
(with another counter) at 10.000066 MHz. I adjusted the "coarse tune"
adjustment on the back of the unit and this is as close as it gets to
10.000000 MHz, so I assume there must be some other adjustment
somewhere.


Scott-

I have a different HP counter that had a similar problem when I got it.
There was a capacitor adjustment in the crystal oven, but it did not
have enough range to bring the oscillator to 10.0 MHz.

It turned out that there was an open thermal fuse in the supply line
inside the crystal oven. It was a plug-in device about the size of a
half watt resistor, maybe smaller. There were two wire-sockets that its
leads plugged into.

I managed to buy the last thermal fuse HP had in stock at the time.
Before it arrived, I had fabricated replacements using a thermal fuse
from Radio Shack, wired in parallel with a high value resistor which had
the correct lead diameter to plug into the wire sockets.

Using a rubidium oscillator purchased on E-Bay, I aligned the repaired
oscillator fairly accurately using an oscilloscope. After several
years, it seems to still be within a fraction of one Hz!

It turns out that this is a common problem. I wrote it up and sent it
to QST for their Hints & Kinks several years back. Since then, one of
the HP designers of the oscillator posted a comment that the thermal
fuse wasn't really needed, since the heating element shouldn't cause any
damage if left on continuously. Even so, I feel better with the thermal
fuse installed!

Fred
K4DII