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WWV & vhf/uhf
Hi,
As apparently WWV doesn't transmit up that high in freq., what are some good "freq. standard" signals to use for calibration in the vhf/uhf ranges ? Thanks, Bob |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On Saturday, December 1, 2012 7:02:26 AM UTC-5, Bob wrote:
Hi, As apparently WWV doesn't transmit up that high in freq., what are some good "freq. standard" signals to use for calibration in the vhf/uhf ranges ? Thanks, Bob Don't think there are ANY time/frequency standards transmitted above 30 MHz. Need more info on this subject... |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On Sat, 01 Dec 2012 07:02:26 -0500, Bob wrote:
Hi, As apparently WWV doesn't transmit up that high in freq., what are some good "freq. standard" signals to use for calibration in the vhf/uhf ranges ? Thanks, Bob What could be used as frequency standard "plucked from VHF" is the TV line frequency. I'm not sure if like in Europe, all TV stations in the US would be equally useful but if you enter this search string in Google ----- "Calibration of high precision oscillators using the TV line frequency as a frequency standard" ----- you get several links that suggest it might be the case. Jan |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On Sunday, December 2, 2012 10:13:50 PM UTC-5, Arid ace wrote:
On Sat, 01 Dec 2012 07:02:26 -0500, Bob wrote: Hi, As apparently WWV doesn't transmit up that high in freq., what are some good "freq. standard" signals to use for calibration in the vhf/uhf ranges ? Thanks, Bob What could be used as frequency standard "plucked from VHF" is the TV line frequency. I'm not sure if like in Europe, all TV stations in the US would be equally useful but if you enter this search string in Google ----- "Calibration of high precision oscillators using the TV line frequency as a frequency standard" ----- you get several links that suggest it might be the case. Jan During the analog TV days maybe it was possible, but not now. I doubt if it could be done now at all...at least in the US. Best frequency standards are at low frequencies,such as 60KHz or even lower. |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On Monday, December 3, 2012 8:58:55 PM UTC-5, Arid ace wrote:
On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 23:07:55 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Sunday, December 2, 2012 10:13:50 PM UTC-5, Arid ace wrote: On Sat, 01 Dec 2012 07:02:26 -0500, Bob wrote: Hi, As apparently WWV doesn't transmit up that high in freq., what are some good "freq. standard" signals to use for calibration in the vhf/uhf ranges ? Thanks, Bob What could be used as frequency standard "plucked from VHF" is the TV line frequency. I'm not sure if like in Europe, all TV stations in the US would be equally useful but if you enter this search string in Google ----- "Calibration of high precision oscillators using the TV line frequency as a frequency standard" ----- you get several links that suggest it might be the case. Jan During the analog TV days maybe it was possible, but not now. I doubt if it could be done now at all...at least in the US. Best frequency standards are at low frequencies,such as 60KHz or even lower. As far as I can remember, the time limit to end all analogue TV transmissions in the US is somewhere in 2015 but if none are left already it's a pity. However WWVB at 60 KHz now is modulated in phase just like happened with many stations in Europe so you can forget to lock a 10MHz VCXO to the WWVB carrier, to measure the drift of any XTO, even oven controlled ones. I looked up available time & frequency stations and unless living close enough to Europe, no luck: http://ac6v.com/standard.htm We don't have any analog tv broadcasting since 2009 over here,in NYC. If WWV and its sisters like WWVB or WWVH cannot be used due to the phase modulation- I think the Canadian CHU still uses simple AM modulation or something very close to it. |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On 12/01/2012 04:02 AM, Bob wrote:
Hi, As apparently WWV doesn't transmit up that high in freq., what are some good "freq. standard" signals to use for calibration in the vhf/uhf ranges ? Thanks, Bob Some High-end GPS receivers have a 10Mhz output. Or you can build your own. http://www.rt66.com/~shera/index_fs.htm http://www.ese-web.com/110.htm |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On 12/04/2012 07:00 AM, dave wrote:
On 12/01/2012 04:02 AM, Bob wrote: Hi, As apparently WWV doesn't transmit up that high in freq., what are some good "freq. standard" signals to use for calibration in the vhf/uhf ranges ? Thanks, Bob Some High-end GPS receivers have a 10Mhz output. Or you can build your own. http://www.rt66.com/~shera/index_fs.htm http://www.ese-web.com/110.htm http://a-aengineering.com/gps.htm |
WWV & vhf/uhf
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WWV & vhf/uhf
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WWV & vhf/uhf
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WWV & vhf/uhf
On Mon, 3 Dec 2012 21:49:28 -0800 (PST), wrote:
[...] We don't have any analog tv broadcasting since 2009 over here,in NYC. If WWV and its sisters like WWVB or WWVH cannot be used due to the phase modulation- I think the Canadian CHU still uses simple AM modulation or something very close to it. The phase modulation used by WWVB is a bit messy. The value of 180 deg for all data would be OK because multiplying the signal with itself would remove the modulation. Unfortunately, the station ID uses 45 deg, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWVB CHU might be the better alternative then, that the frequencies in use aren't a multiple of 100 KHz or 1 MHz isn't a problem. With some creative calculation I managed to lock both 153 KHz and 77.5 KHz to a 10 MHz VCXO so this case is unlikely to be much different. 14670 and 7335 KHz would have my preference as the first is twice the second so one receiver could easily use both signals. Jan |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On 12/05/2012 03:28 AM, Bob Dobbs wrote:
CHU no longer uses the 7335 slot but has moved to 7850, has been for over three years now. If anyone is still looking for a traceable frequency reference: http://www.jrmiller.demon.co.uk/proj...std/frqstd.htm |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On Wednesday, December 5, 2012 10:52:25 AM UTC-5, dave wrote:
On 12/05/2012 03:28 AM, Bob Dobbs wrote: CHU no longer uses the 7335 slot but has moved to 7850, has been for over three years now. If anyone is still looking for a traceable frequency reference: http://www.jrmiller.demon.co.uk/proj...std/frqstd.htm Nice unit.Stable at 10E-11 part.That is MUCH better than HF transmissions and their inherent delays and fading/dropouts ! |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On Wed, 05 Dec 2012 03:28:44 -0800, Bob Dobbs wrote:
Arid ace wrote: On Mon, 3 Dec 2012 21:49:28 -0800 (PST), wrote: [...] We don't have any analog tv broadcasting since 2009 over here,in NYC. If WWV and its sisters like WWVB or WWVH cannot be used due to the phase modulation- I think the Canadian CHU still uses simple AM modulation or something very close to it. The phase modulation used by WWVB is a bit messy. The value of 180 deg for all data would be OK because multiplying the signal with itself would remove the modulation. Unfortunately, the station ID uses 45 deg, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWVB CHU might be the better alternative then, that the frequencies in use aren't a multiple of 100 KHz or 1 MHz isn't a problem. With some creative calculation I managed to lock both 153 KHz and 77.5 KHz to a 10 MHz VCXO so this case is unlikely to be much different. 14670 and 7335 KHz would have my preference as the first is twice the second so one receiver could easily use both signals. Jan CHU no longer uses the 7335 slot but has moved to 7850, has been for over three years now. Thanks, I didn't know that, having used European stations for decades. Time to buy a rubidium based frequency standard (made in China of course) then as that's both more precise and cheaper than a GPS based solution. |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On 12/05/2012 07:09 PM, Arid ace wrote:
On Wed, 05 Dec 2012 03:28:44 -0800, Bob Dobbs wrote: CHU no longer uses the 7335 slot but has moved to 7850, has been for over three years now. Thanks, I didn't know that, having used European stations for decades. Time to buy a rubidium based frequency standard (made in China of course) then as that's both more precise and cheaper than a GPS based solution. I doubt it's more precise than GPS, which uses several "atomic" clocks, but cheaper it is. http://maxmcarter.com/rubidium/index.php |
WWV & vhf/uhf
On Thu, 06 Dec 2012 07:43:12 -0800, dave wrote:
On 12/05/2012 07:09 PM, Arid ace wrote: On Wed, 05 Dec 2012 03:28:44 -0800, Bob Dobbs wrote: CHU no longer uses the 7335 slot but has moved to 7850, has been for over three years now. Thanks, I didn't know that, having used European stations for decades. Time to buy a rubidium based frequency standard (made in China of course) then as that's both more precise and cheaper than a GPS based solution. I doubt it's more precise than GPS, which uses several "atomic" clocks, but cheaper it is. http://maxmcarter.com/rubidium/index.php Excellent article and good news that the dreaded +/- 45 deg phase shift will disappear. As the signal here in Panama can be received as well, it means I can use it in a design for a frequency standard adapted to a very low signal, based on the same (rather successful) principle I used in Europe. |
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