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#1
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Time and Frequency References
rickman wrote:
How important are time and frequency references to amateur radio operators? I've been working on a radio controlled clock design that would be capable of generating a 32.768 kHz, 60 kHz, 240 kHz, 1 MHz and 10 MHz frequency references in addition to providing the time and date. Initially it would be capable of receiving the 60 kHz transmissions of WWVB and MSF. With minor tweaks other stations could be received. Would this be useful to others? We use GPSDOs in our co-channel diversity repeater. The signals we require a 10 MHz and 1PPS. It would be convenient when modules for arbitrary frequencies could be inserted (like 10.240 MHz). Our GPSDO allows only evenly divisible fractions of 10 MHz (like 5, 2, 1 MHz) as auxilliary outputs. Another thing is that the short-term accuracy is not optimal. These references "wander around" the correct frequency. |
#2
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Time and Frequency References
On 4/18/2016 11:29 AM, Rob wrote:
rickman wrote: How important are time and frequency references to amateur radio operators? I've been working on a radio controlled clock design that would be capable of generating a 32.768 kHz, 60 kHz, 240 kHz, 1 MHz and 10 MHz frequency references in addition to providing the time and date. Initially it would be capable of receiving the 60 kHz transmissions of WWVB and MSF. With minor tweaks other stations could be received. Would this be useful to others? We use GPSDOs in our co-channel diversity repeater. The signals we require a 10 MHz and 1PPS. It would be convenient when modules for arbitrary frequencies could be inserted (like 10.240 MHz). Our GPSDO allows only evenly divisible fractions of 10 MHz (like 5, 2, 1 MHz) as auxilliary outputs. Another thing is that the short-term accuracy is not optimal. These references "wander around" the correct frequency. Short term accuracy is what costs real bucks. You need a very stable VCTCXO or ovenized VCXO. How much accuracy are you seeing and how much would you like? -- Rick |
#3
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Time and Frequency References
rickman wrote:
On 4/18/2016 11:29 AM, Rob wrote: rickman wrote: How important are time and frequency references to amateur radio operators? I've been working on a radio controlled clock design that would be capable of generating a 32.768 kHz, 60 kHz, 240 kHz, 1 MHz and 10 MHz frequency references in addition to providing the time and date. Initially it would be capable of receiving the 60 kHz transmissions of WWVB and MSF. With minor tweaks other stations could be received. Would this be useful to others? We use GPSDOs in our co-channel diversity repeater. The signals we require a 10 MHz and 1PPS. It would be convenient when modules for arbitrary frequencies could be inserted (like 10.240 MHz). Our GPSDO allows only evenly divisible fractions of 10 MHz (like 5, 2, 1 MHz) as auxilliary outputs. Another thing is that the short-term accuracy is not optimal. These references "wander around" the correct frequency. Short term accuracy is what costs real bucks. You need a very stable VCTCXO or ovenized VCXO. How much accuracy are you seeing and how much would you like? We have ridiculous requirements :-) We already have such things but it is not enough. Probably we should try a rubidium GPSDO. The 10 MHz is used to lock a 430 MHz transmitter and it should remain in phase with another one. It is preferable that the frequency remains stable if a bit off. What happens now is that the DAC in the GPSDO steps up and down every couple of seconds, and the oscillators wobble around the correct frequency in the 1E-9 area (with of course an average that is very close, more like 1E-11), and this results in funny interference patterns. What is happening is clear when you put the 10 MHz outputs of two independent boxes on the scope in X-Y mode. |
#4
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Time and Frequency References
On 4/19/2016 4:10 AM, Rob wrote:
rickman wrote: On 4/18/2016 11:29 AM, Rob wrote: rickman wrote: How important are time and frequency references to amateur radio operators? I've been working on a radio controlled clock design that would be capable of generating a 32.768 kHz, 60 kHz, 240 kHz, 1 MHz and 10 MHz frequency references in addition to providing the time and date. Initially it would be capable of receiving the 60 kHz transmissions of WWVB and MSF. With minor tweaks other stations could be received. Would this be useful to others? We use GPSDOs in our co-channel diversity repeater. The signals we require a 10 MHz and 1PPS. It would be convenient when modules for arbitrary frequencies could be inserted (like 10.240 MHz). Our GPSDO allows only evenly divisible fractions of 10 MHz (like 5, 2, 1 MHz) as auxilliary outputs. Another thing is that the short-term accuracy is not optimal. These references "wander around" the correct frequency. Short term accuracy is what costs real bucks. You need a very stable VCTCXO or ovenized VCXO. How much accuracy are you seeing and how much would you like? We have ridiculous requirements :-) We already have such things but it is not enough. Probably we should try a rubidium GPSDO. The 10 MHz is used to lock a 430 MHz transmitter and it should remain in phase with another one. It is preferable that the frequency remains stable if a bit off. What happens now is that the DAC in the GPSDO steps up and down every couple of seconds, and the oscillators wobble around the correct frequency in the 1E-9 area (with of course an average that is very close, more like 1E-11), and this results in funny interference patterns. What is happening is clear when you put the 10 MHz outputs of two independent boxes on the scope in X-Y mode. I don't know what they are using for an oscillator, but if you have control over it, can you reduce the corner frequency of the LPF on the control loop? It sounds like the control loop is hunting to me. But at 10-9 I suppose it could be ambient thermal drift too. Yes, I think a rubidium GPSDO would do the job. I remember a couple/three years ago Symmetricom came out with a chip scale atomic clock that can sync to a 1 pps. "Two orders of magnitude better accuracy than oven-controlled crystal oscillators". Only $1,000. Might do the job. They likely package this in a box level product that will do what you want. Check out this one... http://www.microsemi.com/products/ti...-2750#overview They were bought by Microsemi it seems. -- Rick |
#5
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Time and Frequency References
rickman wrote:
What happens now is that the DAC in the GPSDO steps up and down every couple of seconds, and the oscillators wobble around the correct frequency in the 1E-9 area (with of course an average that is very close, more like 1E-11), and this results in funny interference patterns. What is happening is clear when you put the 10 MHz outputs of two independent boxes on the scope in X-Y mode. I don't know what they are using for an oscillator, but if you have control over it, can you reduce the corner frequency of the LPF on the control loop? It sounds like the control loop is hunting to me. But at 10-9 I suppose it could be ambient thermal drift too. Yes, I think a rubidium GPSDO would do the job. I think the problem is that our GPSDO has a 16-bit DAC and it is dithering the digital value to obtain the correct frequency. So when the correct DAC value would be 32000.2 it will do 32000 for 8 seconds then 32001 for 2 seconds, obtaining a long-term average that is quite good, but a wobble with 10-second period as well. These are old Datum 9390 units, we also have some Trimble Thunderbolts that should be better. I remember a couple/three years ago Symmetricom came out with a chip scale atomic clock that can sync to a 1 pps. "Two orders of magnitude better accuracy than oven-controlled crystal oscillators". Only $1,000. Might do the job. They likely package this in a box level product that will do what you want. Check out this one... I would prefer a box that works from GPS and outputs the 1PPS. The Datum and Trimble are in that category. http://www.microsemi.com/products/ti...-2750#overview They were bought by Microsemi it seems. I Have seen and considered these before. That is indeed a GPS referenced rubidium standard. Of course we always prefer stuff that is either cheap or available as surplus (like the Datum and Trimble) :-) |
#6
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Time and Frequency References
On 4/19/2016 7:34 AM, Rob wrote:
rickman wrote: What happens now is that the DAC in the GPSDO steps up and down every couple of seconds, and the oscillators wobble around the correct frequency in the 1E-9 area (with of course an average that is very close, more like 1E-11), and this results in funny interference patterns. What is happening is clear when you put the 10 MHz outputs of two independent boxes on the scope in X-Y mode. I don't know what they are using for an oscillator, but if you have control over it, can you reduce the corner frequency of the LPF on the control loop? It sounds like the control loop is hunting to me. But at 10-9 I suppose it could be ambient thermal drift too. Yes, I think a rubidium GPSDO would do the job. I think the problem is that our GPSDO has a 16-bit DAC and it is dithering the digital value to obtain the correct frequency. So when the correct DAC value would be 32000.2 it will do 32000 for 8 seconds then 32001 for 2 seconds, obtaining a long-term average that is quite good, but a wobble with 10-second period as well. Are you referring to the voltage used to control the VCXO? Not sure what parts you can tweak, but I don't see why the dithering can't be sped up (say 1 kHz) and low pass filtered to produce an actual value of 32000.2. These are old Datum 9390 units, we also have some Trimble Thunderbolts that should be better. I remember a couple/three years ago Symmetricom came out with a chip scale atomic clock that can sync to a 1 pps. "Two orders of magnitude better accuracy than oven-controlled crystal oscillators". Only $1,000. Might do the job. They likely package this in a box level product that will do what you want. Check out this one... I would prefer a box that works from GPS and outputs the 1PPS. The Datum and Trimble are in that category. http://www.microsemi.com/products/ti...-2750#overview They were bought by Microsemi it seems. I Have seen and considered these before. That is indeed a GPS referenced rubidium standard. Of course we always prefer stuff that is either cheap or available as surplus (like the Datum and Trimble) :-) One man's "cheap" is another man's "precious". You'd have to use a number for me to know what you consider "cheap". You seem to be buying boxes rather than building stuff, but if you have access to the innards of the system above and can up the sample rate, $1 worth of components can low pass filter the output to give better accuracy of the control signal. -- Rick |
#7
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Time and Frequency References
rickman wrote:
I think the problem is that our GPSDO has a 16-bit DAC and it is dithering the digital value to obtain the correct frequency. So when the correct DAC value would be 32000.2 it will do 32000 for 8 seconds then 32001 for 2 seconds, obtaining a long-term average that is quite good, but a wobble with 10-second period as well. Are you referring to the voltage used to control the VCXO? Not sure what parts you can tweak, but I don't see why the dithering can't be sped up (say 1 kHz) and low pass filtered to produce an actual value of 32000.2. Probably what the box does is check every second what the frequency error is and change the DAC output. It works out as I described. But indeed, it would be better to add some extra precision that way. Those Datum units are over 20 years old... I Have seen and considered these before. That is indeed a GPS referenced rubidium standard. Of course we always prefer stuff that is either cheap or available as surplus (like the Datum and Trimble) :-) One man's "cheap" is another man's "precious". You'd have to use a number for me to know what you consider "cheap". We run a co-channel diversity repeater with 5 transmitter sites (and three times as much receiver sites), from donations made by individual hams. We get lots of surplus equipment donated, that is how we got a large pile of Datum 9390 units from a decommissioned pager network. Spending $5000 on new GPSDOs is a bit difficult for us, we also have other expenses. Fortunately Trimble Thunderbolts are cheaper and look a lot better on the scope. I need to finish a bit of monitoring code (that we use together with "Lady Heather's Disciplined Oscillator Control Program") and we can start testing how much difference there is in practice. We also want to try software-defined FM modulation of the signal instead of the analog modulator that of course also introduces awful frequency differences because of imperfect alignment. |
#8
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Time and Frequency References
In article ,
Rob wrote: I think the problem is that our GPSDO has a 16-bit DAC and it is dithering the digital value to obtain the correct frequency. So when the correct DAC value would be 32000.2 it will do 32000 for 8 seconds then 32001 for 2 seconds, obtaining a long-term average that is quite good, but a wobble with 10-second period as well. Could you modify it, to "scale down" the analog control voltage coming out of the DAC to a smaller range which "trims" around a center voltage that you set manually? I did something of that sort when building a VE2ZAZ GPSDO. This has only a 10-bit DAC (or 12, I can't remember for sure) which is dithered fairly rapidly to add a couple of additional bits of precision. I low-pass-filtered the DAC output pretty heavily and then used some resistor scaling to reduce its effect to a few percent of the total 5-volt control range that my OCVCXO allows. The "coarse" setting is via an external potentiometer, driven from a good 5-volt precision reference. In addition to the oven for the crystal, I added a separate thermistor/heater board which levels out the temperature in the whole enclosure, which I then insulated pretty heavily. This approach wouldn't change the period of the wobble but would reduce its magnitude by whatever divide-down ratio you chose to implement. |
#9
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Time and Frequency References
Dave Platt wrote:
In article , Rob wrote: I think the problem is that our GPSDO has a 16-bit DAC and it is dithering the digital value to obtain the correct frequency. So when the correct DAC value would be 32000.2 it will do 32000 for 8 seconds then 32001 for 2 seconds, obtaining a long-term average that is quite good, but a wobble with 10-second period as well. Could you modify it, to "scale down" the analog control voltage coming out of the DAC to a smaller range which "trims" around a center voltage that you set manually? This is kind of risky. It may work for some of the units and not for others. They tend to have a systematic drift, the alignment procedure is to turn a trimmer in the oscillator so the DAC outputs a value close to 32768 and then it tends to walk one way. When it approaches the end of the range (say 5000 or 65000) the center has te be re-aligned. As original, they drift about 10000 clicks in a year. Narrowing the tuning range could make it drift too quickly to be practical. As I said before, the first thing to do is to check the Thunderbolt in practice. It should be much better than the aging Datums. (they are so old that they do not even handle GPS weeknumber rollover which first occurred in august 1999) |
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