Re: [Hackrf-dev] advice on a txco to buy?

2018-06-24 Thread Phil Karn
On 6/24/18 09:29, Giuseppe Marullo wrote:
> Ok, found:
> 
> http://www.nooelec.com/store/tiny-tcxo.html
> 
> 20USD and will fit inside the enclosure.

Here in San Diego the local microwave ham gang gets a supply of surplus
10 MHz TCXOs from old Qualcomm Omnitracs mobile units. It helps that
most of us are retired Qualcommers...

Phil

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Re: [Hackrf-dev] advice on a txco to buy?

2018-06-24 Thread Giuseppe Marullo

Ok, found:

http://www.nooelec.com/store/tiny-tcxo.html

20USD and will fit inside the enclosure.

Now I need to fix the broken PA. Component is obsolete and I ordered 3 
from a  UK seller. The switches are only available in China for low qty 
, any recommendation for a trusted source?



Giuseppe Marullo

IW2JWW - JN45RQ

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Re: [Hackrf-dev] advice on a txco to buy?

2018-06-23 Thread Phil Karn
On 6/23/18 03:40, Giuseppe Marullo wrote:
> I was needing (and still searching) for a txco for the HackRf but I
> would like something internal to the box, not sure about what is sold on
> Ebay. Anyone could recommend something that surely would fit inside the
> Standard enclosure?

I got this GPSDO. Works very well so far. It's not inside the box, but
the stability and near foolproof nature of GPS make it worthwhile.

https://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-10MHz-Sinwave-PLL-GPSDO-GPS-DISCIPLINED-OSCILLATOR-adapter-GPS-ANT/262038924752

Perhaps some Nth generation HackRF should have one built in. It just
takes another antenna connector.

Phil
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Re: [Hackrf-dev] advice on a txco to buy?

2018-06-23 Thread Giuseppe Marullo
I was needing (and still searching) for a txco for the HackRf but I 
would like something internal to the box, not sure about what is sold on 
Ebay. Anyone could recommend something that surely would fit inside the 
Standard enclosure?


Anyway if you really want to address the problem, spend a little more 
and use something like this one:


https://www.ebay.it/itm/Trimble-GPS-Receiver-GPSDO-10MHz-1PPS-GPS-Disciplined-Clock-sine-and-square-wave/252162780444?hash=item3ab612ad1c:g:PqcAAOSww-Baabwy

It is a second hand trimble gpsdo module, enclosed with a aluminum box, 
add this antenna:


https://www.ebay.it/itm/Maxrad-GPS-TMG-26N-26db-gps-timing-antenna-antenne-N-female/232793495105?hash=item363392d641:g:XOgAAOSw5VFWMReh

and you could have like 10ppt (parts per trillion) accuracy if you keep 
it powered on for several days.


Most important part is that it self checks accuracy, and depending on 
the module inside (at the moment trimble not Symmetricom beware) you 
should be able to use Lady Heater (http://www.ke5fx.com/heather/readme.htm).


Another alternative is QRPLabs:
https://qrp-labs.com/progrock.html plus
https://qrp-labs.com/qlg1.html

cheaper but in kit and without enclosures.
I have both, and generally they are very good for the price. QRPLabs is 
off by like 2Hz@10MHz, didn't have the time to investigate why.




Subscribe to time nuts mailing list if you want to know more (*much* 
more, possibly even too much) about timing:


www.leapsecond.com

Cheers!

Giuseppe Marullo
IW2JWW - JN45RQ


On 06/13/2018 11:06 PM, Chuck McManis wrote:

Orrin,

I expect that if you continue in your journey in software radio you 
will find that a solid 10Mhz reference to be a good thing to have in 
general. (which you can use to drive the HackRF). I ended up getting 
an RF signal generator from Crowd Supply 
(https://www.crowdsupply.com/era-instruments/erasynth) which works 
really well for this and I can use it with all of my SDRs in addtiion 
to the HackRF.  A friend of mine recommended this one 
(https://www.tindie.com/products/AnalysIR/10mhz-ocxo-frequency-standard-module-or-kit/) 
which is basically $77 when you get all the parts and it is assembled) 
so lower cost but equally movable from SDR to SDR.


Cheers,
--Chuck




On Tue, Jun 12, 2018 at 3:33 PM, Orrin Winton > wrote:


Hello folks, have had my HackRF for about a week and am going thru
Michael's tutorials & other tutorials. Love this device.

Are the eBay items described as "New External TCXO clock PPM 0.1
for HackRF One GPS Applications GSM/WCDMA/LTE" for $10-12 the
appropriate part to buy? (noob here)

Or can some similar item be bought that has SMA jacks on it and
can be connected via cable to the jack on the rear of the HackRF?

The $10 clock looks like it'll require leaving the top half of the
case off, is why i ask.

At 434 MHz doing hackrf_transfer i'm getting 700 to 1000 hz drift
(downwards in freq) on a replayed CW signal, in ten minutes, which
(if i'm calculating this correctly) is 1.6 to 2.3 ppm.

I'm being careful to use the correct antenna on the HackRF, keep
gains low, and use low xmit power (2W) on my amateur transceiver
across the room (to record an rf_transfer). Possibly i should put
an attenuator on the 2W radio.

Thanks for comments.

Orrin in NE Calif.


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Re: [Hackrf-dev] advice on a txco to buy?

2018-06-13 Thread Chuck McManis
Orrin,

I expect that if you continue in your journey in software radio you will
find that a solid 10Mhz reference to be a good thing to have in general.
(which you can use to drive the HackRF). I ended up getting an RF signal
generator from Crowd Supply (
https://www.crowdsupply.com/era-instruments/erasynth) which works really
well for this and I can use it with all of my SDRs in addtiion to the
HackRF.  A friend of mine recommended this one (
https://www.tindie.com/products/AnalysIR/10mhz-ocxo-frequency-standard-module-or-kit/)
which is basically $77 when you get all the parts and it is assembled) so
lower cost but equally movable from SDR to SDR.

Cheers,
--Chuck




On Tue, Jun 12, 2018 at 3:33 PM, Orrin Winton 
wrote:

> Hello folks, have had my HackRF for about a week and am going thru
> Michael's tutorials & other tutorials. Love this device.
>
> Are the eBay items described as "New External TCXO clock PPM 0.1 for
> HackRF One GPS Applications GSM/WCDMA/LTE" for $10-12 the appropriate part
> to buy? (noob here)
>
> Or can some similar item be bought that has SMA jacks on it and can be
> connected via cable to the jack on the rear of the HackRF?
>
> The $10 clock looks like it'll require leaving the top half of the case
> off, is why i ask.
>
> At 434 MHz doing hackrf_transfer i'm getting 700 to 1000 hz drift
> (downwards in freq) on a replayed CW signal, in ten minutes, which (if i'm
> calculating this correctly) is 1.6 to 2.3 ppm.
>
> I'm being careful to use the correct antenna on the HackRF, keep gains
> low, and use low xmit power (2W) on my amateur transceiver across the room
> (to record an rf_transfer). Possibly i should put an attenuator on the 2W
> radio.
>
> Thanks for comments.
>
> Orrin in NE Calif.
>
>
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> HackRF-dev mailing list
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>
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[Hackrf-dev] advice on a txco to buy?

2018-06-12 Thread Orrin Winton
Hello folks, have had my HackRF for about a week and am going thru
Michael's tutorials & other tutorials. Love this device.

Are the eBay items described as "New External TCXO clock PPM 0.1 for HackRF
One GPS Applications GSM/WCDMA/LTE" for $10-12 the appropriate part to buy?
(noob here)

Or can some similar item be bought that has SMA jacks on it and can be
connected via cable to the jack on the rear of the HackRF?

The $10 clock looks like it'll require leaving the top half of the case
off, is why i ask.

At 434 MHz doing hackrf_transfer i'm getting 700 to 1000 hz drift
(downwards in freq) on a replayed CW signal, in ten minutes, which (if i'm
calculating this correctly) is 1.6 to 2.3 ppm.

I'm being careful to use the correct antenna on the HackRF, keep gains low,
and use low xmit power (2W) on my amateur transceiver across the room (to
record an rf_transfer). Possibly i should put an attenuator on the 2W radio.

Thanks for comments.

Orrin in NE Calif.
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