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On Oct 11, 5:12 am, Frnak McKenney
wrote: On Wed, 10 Oct 2007 10:19:49 -0700, Richard Clark wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 02:16:37 -0000, Frnak McKenney wrote: Am I asking too much? Hi Frnak, Judging by the questions and responses, I would have to say "Yes." To this point you haven't exactly demonstrated you have a problem, just a complaint of a signal of poor quality to a human's perception. For the clock itself, that complaint is arguably weak. Let's just examine the evidence for the problem: There is none! You have a clock that has 100mS resolution, and yet you have never said how much it is off. 100mS? 1S? 10S? 1 minute? 1 Hour? All, or any part of any of these metrics? It's hard to tell exactly how much the clock is off by. Every time the power hiccups, or I have to move the MAC-II, or power down the outlet the display switches to something like this (best viewed with a fixed-width font): _ _ _ _ /_ /_ /_ /_ / / /_/ /_ _/ /_ /_ and it stays that way for weeks. Or months. As Reggie would have chimed in at this point "If you can't measure it and express it with a quantifiable, then you don't know anything." Given the extent of my ignorance concerning 'most everything, that seems likely. grin! Of course, your only source of accurate information is the one you are suggesting has a problem. It probably doesn't have a problem, but then how does one use this source's accuracy to check itself? You would need a second clock to check it, and we would be hearing your complaint in stereo. Hm... I don't _think_ so. At least, I havent heard of any plans for a High-Def upgrade to Usenet lately, but with Congress currently in session I suppose anything is possible. As for testing the clock's accuracy, you're right about needing a second source ("Qui custodiet ipsos custodes?" or something like that? grin). On the other hand, as long as the digits are flashing by, I'm happy to "just trust them". I've calibrated time standards to the nearest 100nS and it is accomplished at one sitting, no need for total connectivity such as you might imagine (unless the clock you have is especially crappy). Your clock has a resolution of 0.1 second. There are roughly 1 million ticks of the display in a day. A simple XTAL oscillator at 10 MHz would exhibit 50ppm stability and in a day wander up to 0.5 second. The next day it might wander back, the day following it might slip below by 0.5 second. If I read the MAC-II manual correctly, each time it "connects to WWV" (gets a recognizable signal) it calculates and saves an adjustment value. The front panel has two LEDs labelled "TRIM UP" and "TRIM DN" to indicate how well it's doing. ... You would be hard pressed to confirm this with over the air matching to the strike of the WWV gong - except if the clock is especially crappy (and it could be). The same XTAL might also exhibit an absolute error of 50ppm and accumulate time error. This would be far more noticeable over the course of a week (you could confirm the error by listening to time announcements - but you have been silent to this issue). True. And, while I'm sure the _WWV_ announcer hasn't been silent, _I_ haven't heard anything comprehendable from him/her/it out of my MAC-II's speaker at any point in the past few weeks. These worst case errors all presume that the internal circuitry cannot over the course of 24 hours manage to pull out one of 1400 synchronizing opportunities to phase lock out the error. These circuits are generally optimized to accomplish just this (they work fine in watches with a 60KHz signal after all). Your clock may be especially crappy (but that is unlikely). Based on the feedback from other posters, it's likely a consequence of 10MHz propagation. A VLF RF signal like 60KHz reportedly does a much better job of getting a readable signal to a wide area. The clock synchronizing circuits don't have to listen to the bandwidth of noise you hear, the speaker is for your convenience, not the clock's. I am sure that it works fine with only 1 LED lit - this is not a case of "can you hear me now?" No, but (assuming you're subbing for WWV grin!) it would be nice to know I was going to get a readable message from "you" more than once every couple of months. (Why do I hear the echo of my parents' frustration during my colege days? grin!) Thanks for the feedback. I admit I hadn't thought that much about the accuracy of the MAC-II; I'm afraid I've been too caught up in simply trying to get digits instead of "error text" on the display. Frank -- "A good traveller has no fixed plans and is not intent on arriving." -- Lao Tzu (570-490 BC) -- Frank McKenney, McKenney Associates Richmond, Virginia / (804) 320-4887 Munged E-mail: frank uscore mckenney ayut minds pring dawt cahm (y'all) Gee, all this trouble you're having getting a good signal from WWV on 10MHz makes me wonder, "why??" I mean, why bother? It must be the challenge! I'm a bit closer to Ft. Collins, but I wouldn't expect things to be all that much different, and in any event, the same antenna I've used for them has worked fine for signals from W1AW, for frequency measuring tests. That antenna is just a short piece of wire, maybe five feet long, connected to a signal analyzer's input port. The signal analyzer's input doesn't even have a particularly good noise figure. But with it, I get a good enough signal from WWV to easily track the nocturnal/diurnal frequency shifts that happen as the path length changes. (The analyzer may not have a great RF front end, but it has a very stable frequency reference...) Similarly, I have a portable short wave radio that has an awful front end, and with just a 3 foot whip antenna, it gets WWV 10MHz fine most of the time. Obviously, there are times of the day when propagation just doesn't do it, but over the period of one day, and not during a geomagnetic storm, the signal is usually available. All this makes me wonder if the receiver in your clock is OK. I'd start by looking at that; or at very least, see if a known-working radio receiver has as much trouble with the signal as the clock seems to. Given that the clock has a single frequency receiver, even a pretty simple receiver design should give decent performance. It's also possible that you have some signal source on nominally 10MHz nearby, and you hear than instead of WWV. There are soooo many microprocessors around the average home these days that it's entirely possible that the source of the trouble is very nearby--but could also be in a neighbor's house (or car -- or garage -- or ??). If you want an accurate clock and get tired of fooling with WWV-10MHz, and don't want to use WWVB-60kHz, you might consider using a GPS. As long as you can manage an antenna with a reasonably clear view of the sky, you should be able to have a clock reliably set to within less than a second accuracy practically all the time. Or, if you'd like to be independent of external references, modify your MAC with an oven oscillator. Oven stabilized crystal oscillators left on for a long time will almost always settle out to very low drift rates---one part in 10^8 over a year shouldn't be difficult, in my experience, and GPS signals can be used to calibrate it occasionally. One part in 10^8 is about 1/3 of a second per year. Cheers, Tom |
#2
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On Thu, 11 Oct 2007 11:26:03 -0700, K7ITM wrote:
On Oct 11, 5:12 am, Frnak McKenney wrote: On Wed, 10 Oct 2007 10:19:49 -0700, Richard Clark wrote: On Tue, 09 Oct 2007 02:16:37 -0000, Frnak McKenney wrote: Am I asking too much? Hi Frnak, Judging by the questions and responses, I would have to say "Yes." --snip-- Gee, all this trouble you're having getting a good signal from WWV on 10MHz makes me wonder, "why??" I mean, why bother? It must be the challenge! I'm a bit closer to Ft. Collins, but I wouldn't expect things to be all that much different, and in any event, the same antenna I've used for them has worked fine for signals from W1AW, for frequency measuring tests. That antenna is just a short piece of wire, maybe five feet long, connected to a signal analyzer's input port. The signal analyzer's input doesn't even have a particularly good noise figure. But with it, I get a good enough signal from WWV to easily track the nocturnal/diurnal frequency shifts that happen as the path length changes. (The analyzer may not have a great RF front end, but it has a very stable frequency reference...) Similarly, I have a portable short wave radio that has an awful front end, and with just a 3 foot whip antenna, it gets WWV 10MHz fine most of the time. Obviously, there are times of the day when propagation just doesn't do it, but over the period of one day, and not during a geomagnetic storm, the signal is usually available. Hm. Sounds great. All this makes me wonder if the receiver in your clock is OK. I'd start by looking at that; or at very least, see if a known-working radio receiver has as much trouble with the signal as the clock seems to. Given that the clock has a single frequency receiver, even a pretty simple receiver design should give decent performance. The RF section is a one-transistor (J-FET) amplifier followed by a TDA1072A "Integrated AM receiver" chip. I'm not sure how to go about comparing that to your equipment. It's also possible that you have some signal source on nominally 10MHz nearby, and you hear than instead of WWV. There are soooo many microprocessors around the average home these days that it's entirely possible that the source of the trouble is very nearby--but could also be in a neighbor's house (or car -- or garage -- or ??). Highly possible, but the noise level "at the speaker" seems to have fallen off appreciably in the past few days. Also, I think I'm doing a better job of tuning the antenna; adjusting with no clearly defined signal is a chicken-and-egg problem, but two days ago I started hearing a deafening cackle. grin! If you want an accurate clock and get tired of fooling with WWV-10MHz, and don't want to use WWVB-60kHz, you might consider using a GPS. As long as you can manage an antenna with a reasonably clear view of the sky, you should be able to have a clock reliably set to within less than a second accuracy practically all the time. Or, if you'd like to be independent of external references, modify your MAC with an oven oscillator. Oven stabilized crystal oscillators left on for a long time will almost always settle out to very low drift rates---one part in 10^8 over a year shouldn't be difficult, in my experience, and GPS signals can be used to calibrate it occasionally. One part in 10^8 is about 1/3 of a second per year. Yup. GPS would eb the way to go for accuracy... or -- for the billion-dollar-budget people -- your very own Cesium Clock. grin! Frank -- To learn is to change. Learning allows an animal child to finish the long, slow process of evolution by changing in its own lifetime. Tiger cubs, eaglets, or babies, nature brings us all into existence with the ability to learn, and the rest is up to us. -- Susan McCarthy / Becoming a Tiger -- Frank McKenney, McKenney Associates Richmond, Virginia / (804) 320-4887 Munged E-mail: frank uscore mckenney ayut minds pring dawt cahm (y'all) |
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