Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #11   Report Post  
Old September 2nd 03, 11:29 PM
Tom Bruhns
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Leland C. Scott" wrote in message ...
"Fred McKenzie" wrote in message
.
..
Please do not take this as a condemnation of the

10811 oscillator. I am very
impressed with how stable it has been over a

long period of time.

Leland,

Your email return address is a bit too munged (;-) to be useful, so I
have to post...drop me an email and let me know what characteristics
you are looking for in an OCXO and maybe I can help you out.

Cheers,
Tom
  #12   Report Post  
Old September 2nd 03, 11:29 PM
Tom Bruhns
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Leland C. Scott" wrote in message ...
"Fred McKenzie" wrote in message
.
..
Please do not take this as a condemnation of the

10811 oscillator. I am very
impressed with how stable it has been over a

long period of time.

Leland,

Your email return address is a bit too munged (;-) to be useful, so I
have to post...drop me an email and let me know what characteristics
you are looking for in an OCXO and maybe I can help you out.

Cheers,
Tom
  #13   Report Post  
Old September 3rd 03, 06:42 AM
Fred McKenzie
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Exactly the same thing happened to me. It's fortunate I found a
service manual for my frequency counter on eBay or I might never
have diagnosed the problem. The manual states that the normal
operating temperature for the oscillator is 80-84C.

Henry-

I had the service manual for my counter, but it did not have sufficient
information about the 10811-series OCXO, for the HP/Agilent parts department to
identify the thermal fuse. I had to obtain a separate manual for slightly
different oscillators in that series.

The temperature of the oven is chosen to match each specific crystal. The
thermal fuse should be sufficiently high that it won't open in normal
operation, but will if there is a problem. The original part for my oscillator
was rated at 108 degrees C. The revised part is rated at 115 degrees C. It is
HP/Agilent part number 10811-80008. Last year the price was $10.50 plus tax.

I also found a 117 Degree C "Thermal Cut-Off", NTE Electronics NTE8115. Radio
Shack has a #270-1322A thermal fuse rated at 128 degrees C. Both of these are
larger than the original part, and their leads are too fat to fit in the
original pin sockets. I solved that by finding a high value resistor with the
correct lead diameter, and soldering it in parallel with the thermal fuse. It
was necessary to use a heavy pair of pliers as a heat sink to avoid melting the
fuse element while soldering! The larger thermal fuse with its parallel
resistor is a tight fit. I used some fiberglass tape to insulate it, to keep
from shorting to nearby components.

I eventually replaced the substitute with the correct part, and it has been
working for about a year now with less than a tenth of one Hertz drift at 10
MHz, or better than ten parts per billion compared to the Rubidium controlled
oscillator.

73, Fred, K4DII

  #14   Report Post  
Old September 3rd 03, 06:42 AM
Fred McKenzie
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Exactly the same thing happened to me. It's fortunate I found a
service manual for my frequency counter on eBay or I might never
have diagnosed the problem. The manual states that the normal
operating temperature for the oscillator is 80-84C.

Henry-

I had the service manual for my counter, but it did not have sufficient
information about the 10811-series OCXO, for the HP/Agilent parts department to
identify the thermal fuse. I had to obtain a separate manual for slightly
different oscillators in that series.

The temperature of the oven is chosen to match each specific crystal. The
thermal fuse should be sufficiently high that it won't open in normal
operation, but will if there is a problem. The original part for my oscillator
was rated at 108 degrees C. The revised part is rated at 115 degrees C. It is
HP/Agilent part number 10811-80008. Last year the price was $10.50 plus tax.

I also found a 117 Degree C "Thermal Cut-Off", NTE Electronics NTE8115. Radio
Shack has a #270-1322A thermal fuse rated at 128 degrees C. Both of these are
larger than the original part, and their leads are too fat to fit in the
original pin sockets. I solved that by finding a high value resistor with the
correct lead diameter, and soldering it in parallel with the thermal fuse. It
was necessary to use a heavy pair of pliers as a heat sink to avoid melting the
fuse element while soldering! The larger thermal fuse with its parallel
resistor is a tight fit. I used some fiberglass tape to insulate it, to keep
from shorting to nearby components.

I eventually replaced the substitute with the correct part, and it has been
working for about a year now with less than a tenth of one Hertz drift at 10
MHz, or better than ten parts per billion compared to the Rubidium controlled
oscillator.

73, Fred, K4DII

  #15   Report Post  
Old September 3rd 03, 09:55 PM
Henry A. Pasternack
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Fred McKenzie" wrote in message
...
The temperature of the oven is chosen to match each specific crystal. The
thermal fuse should be sufficiently high that it won't open in normal
operation, but will if there is a problem. The original part for my

oscillator
was rated at 108 degrees C. The revised part is rated at 115 degrees C.

It is
HP/Agilent part number 10811-80008. Last year the price was $10.50 plus

tax.

Thanks for the info, Fred. Since the oven temperature is controlled by
a thermistor circuit, the selection of the thermal fuse should have no
effect on the normal operating temperature or oscillator stability (unless,
of course, the fuse opens). Digi-Key's price for these devices is 45 cents
each, a considerable cost savings.

The NTE part is definitely too big, but the smaller Panasonic F-series
should fit perfectly.

I wanted to understand why the original thermal fuse opened if its rating
was 105C. It turns out that the behavior of these devices depends both
on the temperature, the rate of change of temperature, and the amount of
current flowing through it. The spec sheets list three or four cutoff
values for each device, depending on the test conditions, spanning a very
wide range (30C or more!). The 130C unit I selected has a long-term
maximum temperature rating of only 80C at 5A DC current. I figured this
was a reasonable compromise given the nominal 82C operating temperature
of the oven.

The thermal cutoff point will also change due to soldering heat. All in
all, these are pretty complicated devices...

-Henry




  #16   Report Post  
Old September 3rd 03, 09:55 PM
Henry A. Pasternack
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Fred McKenzie" wrote in message
...
The temperature of the oven is chosen to match each specific crystal. The
thermal fuse should be sufficiently high that it won't open in normal
operation, but will if there is a problem. The original part for my

oscillator
was rated at 108 degrees C. The revised part is rated at 115 degrees C.

It is
HP/Agilent part number 10811-80008. Last year the price was $10.50 plus

tax.

Thanks for the info, Fred. Since the oven temperature is controlled by
a thermistor circuit, the selection of the thermal fuse should have no
effect on the normal operating temperature or oscillator stability (unless,
of course, the fuse opens). Digi-Key's price for these devices is 45 cents
each, a considerable cost savings.

The NTE part is definitely too big, but the smaller Panasonic F-series
should fit perfectly.

I wanted to understand why the original thermal fuse opened if its rating
was 105C. It turns out that the behavior of these devices depends both
on the temperature, the rate of change of temperature, and the amount of
current flowing through it. The spec sheets list three or four cutoff
values for each device, depending on the test conditions, spanning a very
wide range (30C or more!). The 130C unit I selected has a long-term
maximum temperature rating of only 80C at 5A DC current. I figured this
was a reasonable compromise given the nominal 82C operating temperature
of the oven.

The thermal cutoff point will also change due to soldering heat. All in
all, these are pretty complicated devices...

-Henry


Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Sources for Replacement diode for Struthers Electronics TS-1285/URM-120 h-f pickup David J Windisch Equipment 0 May 4th 04 11:30 AM
Sources for Replacement diode for Struthers Electronics TS-1285/URM-120 h-f pickup David J Windisch Equipment 0 May 4th 04 11:30 AM
RS232 "relay board" sources? Rick Karlquist N6RK Digital 2 December 24th 03 10:01 AM
RS232 "relay board" sources? Rick Karlquist N6RK Digital 0 December 18th 03 04:23 PM
651S-1 manual sources? David Boatanchors 1 September 5th 03 11:20 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:31 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017