http://www.elmelectronics.com/ebench.html#Oscillators

| Larry <[email protected]> wrote:
| I recently completed a Kabtronics Nixie clock that uses line
| frequency.  Now I'm going to have to add a 60Hz generator to it.
| Thanks for the link.

If you can change the input source (3.58MHz xtal), or tweak it, you
might just want to leave things alone.

There are 525,960 minutes in a year, on average. 525,600 for a normal
year, and 527,040 for a leap year. Being off 20 minutes in a year
works out to ~38ppm (East Coast). 8 minutes comes out to 15ppm (West
Coast). A typical crystal has 30 to 50 ppm accuracy, or between 15 to
26 minutes off, in a year. You'll get no improvement with a common
crystal. You might just as well just stick with the line sync, and
just occasionally hit that minute button, to correct the time.

That module won't help you unless you swap out that xtal, and tie a
TCXO to the clock input. Of course, you'll need to match the
frequency, or write your own uC code. A TCXO has an initial accuracy
in the 1ppm to 2.5ppm territory. Even when extra errors, such as aging
coming into play, you're still a lot better off than using a cheap
xtal.

I actually use to sell a coded uC (a tiny12 in fact) on eBay, that
outputed 50Hz, 60Hz, and 1Hz. Sold it for $5 each. Maybe I should just
post the source code, to screw with that guy. Code is pretty trivial.


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