Lamar,

You make it sound like TXCOs are rare, but they're actually quite common in 
most single board computers. True, you're probably not gonna find them in the 
$35 cellular-based SBCs, but since these temperature compensated oscillators 
cost less than a dollar each in quantity, they're quite common in most 
industrial species for well under $100.

An Ovenized XCO is absolutely not required for IT-grade NTP servers. If you 
need sub-microsecond  low-jitter leading-edge clocks, for BITS timing of SONET 
or radio networks for example, then an OXCO is helpful. But NTP itself is not 
that accurate. NTP can usually maintain time to only within tens of 
milliseconds over the public Internet, and can only achieve better than one 
millisecond accuracy in local area networks under ideal conditions. 

 -mel 

> On May 13, 2016, at 7:13 AM, Lamar Owen <lo...@pari.edu> wrote:
> 
>> On 05/11/2016 09:46 PM, Josh Reynolds wrote:
>> maybe try [setting up an NTP server] with an odroid?
>> 
> ...
> 
> I have several ODroid C2's, and the first thing to note about them is that 
> there is no RTC at all.  Also, the oscillator is just a garden-variety 
> non-temperature-compensated quartz crystal, and not necessarily a very 
> precise one, either (precise quartz oscillators can cost more than the whole 
> ODroid board costs).  The XU4 and other ODroid devices make nice single-board 
> ARM computers, but have pretty ratty oscillator precision.
> 
> You really have to have at least a temperature compensated quartz crystal 
> oscillator (TCXO) to even begin to think about an NTP server, for anything 
> but the most rudimentary of timing.  Ovenized quartz oscillators (OCXO) and 
> rubidium standards are the next step up, and most reasonably good 
> GPS-disciplined clocks have at least an ovenized quartz oscillator module 
> (the Agilent Z3816 and kin are of this type).
> 

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