Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread ed breya
I'd recommend that fiber-optic transmission should be used where it has 
definite advantages, such as long distance, for galvanic isolation, or 
in serious EMC situations. It's fun to experiment with for all kinds of 
things, but it has no advantage over traditional wiring/cable for signal 
routing in a lab with "normal" operating and distance requirements.


I don't see much point (other than the fun of fooling around with it) in 
the added complexity, versus the usual, simple, cabling that gets the 
job done. Also remember, you pay a noise penalty in the conversion of 
electrical signals to light and back.


Ed

___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread jimlux

On 3/21/19 1:19 AM, Gerhard Hoffmann wrote:



BTW our modules for Cisco had special contents in some registers to make 
sure

that nobody could use alien modules. There must have happened some
social engineering if I read the post above :-)



I suspect more that someone sued under the Magnuson Moss Act -
You can't deny warranty service for using "third party plug compatible" 
- and there's some things about "not concealing details of the 
interface" which would make creating such plug compatible devices.  This 
dates way back to the IBM mainframe days.


Note that this is probably (by court precedents that are available) only 
for "computing and communication equipment"  - little crypto id chips in 
printer cartridges may not fall in that bucket.


___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] Distribution amplifier for 10MHz and 1 pps

2019-03-21 Thread Bob kb8tq
Hi

How low is low ? :) 

Based on the plot that Bill provides in the write up you linked to, he measured 
the insertion phase noise of the unit. His description is (as always) accurate:

“….this level of performance isn’t exceptionally good, it is quite adequate for 
its intended purpose …”

 = “PLENTY low enough for me”

The Rb sources he’s playing with limit what he needs in an amplifier. 

=

So - how low does this or that *need* to be?  Is  -153 at 10 KHz good enough 
or does it need to be at -173? In some systems applications, the magic number 
is in the -180’s (with a price that is a bit insane ….). Only the system 
designer
can answer that question. There is no absolute limit to “low”. 

You can buy OCXO’s with phase noise in the -165 to -170 dbc/Hz range at 10KHz 
offset on eBay for not a crazy lot of money. Some are at 10 MHz others at odd 
frequencies. Quite a few are floating around at 100 MHz out of a Harris Farinon
box being parted out.

Why might you want a 100 MHz output? A 10 MHz unit will be 20 db worse at 
100 MHz.  Phase noise goes up 20 log N (N is the multiplier). A lot of people
go that way for microwave work. Some do GPSDO’s at 100 MHz. 

If you have an OCXO with noise at -173 dbc/Hz, it still will be degraded a bit 
by
a buffer that is at -173.  Your net output would be at -170 dbc/Hz. That’s just 
the
way noise works. At -163 on the OCXO and -173 on the buffer, the impact is small
enough that it really doesn’t count. 

If that all sounds like the whole story - nope. You can then get into various 
offsets
from carrier and go round and round some more.  The same 100 MHz OCXO
that “wins” over the 10 MHz unit above likely looses badly if you look at 10 Hz
offset. 

Lots of fun 

Bob

> On Mar 21, 2019, at 5:01 AM, Tobias Pluess  wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> if it is of interest for someone:
> I have made my own distribution amplifier for this exact purpose. Since I 
> want sine waves, not square, I used some OpAmps. Hamilton Technical Services 
> has published a design for a distributor here
> 
> http://www.stable32.com/An%20Octal%2010%20MHz%20Distribution%20Amplifier.pdf
> 
> and I have designed my own one which is quite similar.
> 
> Schematic of one channel:
> https://hb9fsx.ch/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/ad9631-10MHz-driver.png
> 
> Frequency response, input matching and reverse isolation:
> https://hb9fsx.ch/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/distrib-amp-bode2.png
> 
> Distortion:
> https://hb9fsx.ch/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/distrib-amp-fft.png
> 
> 
> Since it uses OpAmps it is quite easy to design one stage for a particular 
> desired input impedance. So one of the channels has 200 Ohms input impedance, 
> and which results in 50 Ohms if 4 channels are paralleled - and thus the 
> input and output impedances stay at 50 Ohms. So there is no need for a real 
> "splitter".
> 
> So far I was not able to measure the residual phase noise of this distributor 
> because I am still lacking a proper phase noise test set. (but it becomes 
> better. I am currently making one. Hopefully I will finish someday :-)).
> 
> 
> Tobias
> HB9FSX
> 
> 
> 
> From: time-nuts [time-nuts-boun...@lists.febo.com] on behalf of Perry Sandeen 
> via time-nuts [time-nuts@lists.febo.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, March 20, 2019 23:50
> To: time-nuts@lists.febo.com
> Cc: Perry Sandeen
> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Distribution amplifier for 10MHz and 1 pps
> 
> Yo Bubba Dudes!
> Wrote:
> Gosh. This topic comes up at least once every 6 months. Adiligent search of 
> the time-nuts database would turn up amazing things. . .
> Yep, it does and it always will for at least two reasons.
> One, we have new people joining the list.  Which is great. They're at the 
> beginning of a learning curve and most aren't in the upper echelons of TN 
> knowledge.  It's a hobby for them not an extension of their professional 
> lives.  But they want to learn and make progress
> 
> New members aren't aware of the past data base of info, and speaking for 
> myself I never found an easy way to search.  If there is an easy way to do so 
> I'm willing to be taught.
> I learn a lot from the posters even if it is far above my technical skills.  
> If I have no understanding or interest of post(s), I just delete it and keep 
> what interests or is helpful to me.
> That's as it should be, and hopefully always will be, on a list like this 
> with such a diverse mix of members.
> Now we all started spending 9 months in a nice warm water bath happily 
> sucking our thumb.
> Then some dude takes us out, turns us upside down, and slaps us on our butt 
> while saying *Welcome to the world*!
> Now what we think is: Say what sucker! I was perfectly happy where I was and 
> minding by own business.
> However, like it or not, we are then at the start of the unending learning 
> curve until our lights goes out figuratively or literally.
> Regards,
> Perrier
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 

[time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread Mark Sims
The "personality" for these modules is stored in a bog standard 3.3V 256 byte 
I2C EEPROM (address 0xA0).  The I2C bus is n the connector.  An Arduino can 
reprogram that memory.   For the simplest case you just change the vendor ID 
info.  I think the kilobuck level programmers is just a simple I2C interface 
with some software that knows what to change.

--

>As far as the reprogramming goes (another comment on the list) - I 
understand that is to make the unit have some particular flavor 
SFP-wise.  If you were plugging them into a Cisco switch and all you had 
was ones configured for Juniper switches, then you'd want to do that. At 
the multikilobuck level to do this, you'd need a LOT of them to make it 
worthwhile. 
___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread Bob Bownes
To pull this back to time nuts territory, this brings up the idea of simply
using traditional ethernet infrastructure, be it 100M/1G/10G/whatever at
the PHY layer to achieve distribution of 1pps. The infrastructure is easily
enough interfaced to, even a simple microprocessor can do it, using
switches allows for distribution with known characteristics. Not sure that
you'd need to climb up even into Layer 2, but if you do, that would allow
for identification of the sources by MAC address. You's still have to worry
about collisions I suppose. There are other networking technologies that
could also be used with less impact and better characteristics, with
infiniband (lossless, low latency) coming immediately to mind.

On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 11:03 AM Julien Goodwin 
wrote:

>
> The lock in is almost entirely vendor profiteering, optical monitoring &
> wavelength switching are standards (where implemented), but plenty of
> vendors use (almost always trivially bypassable) lock-in to sell SFPs
> they rebrand from the same OEMs at up to 100x markup.
>
> The folk in the big telcos (or in my case, big content providers) who
> run the global backbones have plenty of stories.
>

As one of the guys who has to make these decisions for a big company, I
have to pipe up in our defense.

It has very little to do with profiteering, though it is easily seen as
such. In reality, there are a number of vendors of transceivers out there
(or other similar parts) ranging from excellent to really horrible. The
'lock-in' is to restrict the pool to those that have been qualified and
tested. This vastly reduces support and service hassles on both ends of the
phone call. The incremental revenue on a transceiver of, in one case I can
document, of about $600, even when multiplied by the number required for a
full system, isn't even in the decimal points of the total cost of the
system, which can easily exceed $3-4M.

Bob
___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] Yet another GPSDO project.

2019-03-21 Thread Bob kb8tq
Hi

Good point. We tend to *assume* ADEV-ish concerns when there may
be other parameters that take precedence. You most certainly can mess
up phase noise (and spurs) in a GPSDO.

Bob

> On Mar 21, 2019, at 4:14 AM, Leo Bodnar  wrote:
> 
> Tobias,
> Have you measured resulting phase noise of the finished unit?
> Thanks
> Leo
> 
>> From: Tobias Pluess 
>> sure, I believe you since my primary requirement was phase noise. This is 
>> because I'd like to use the OCXO as reference for my spectrum analyzer and 
>> also for my HP 8663 signal generator to do phase noise measurements 
> ___
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to 
> http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
> and follow the instructions there.


___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] Distribution amplifier for 10MHz and 1 pps

2019-03-21 Thread Tobias Pluess
Hi,

if it is of interest for someone:
I have made my own distribution amplifier for this exact purpose. Since I want 
sine waves, not square, I used some OpAmps. Hamilton Technical Services has 
published a design for a distributor here

http://www.stable32.com/An%20Octal%2010%20MHz%20Distribution%20Amplifier.pdf

and I have designed my own one which is quite similar.

Schematic of one channel:
https://hb9fsx.ch/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/ad9631-10MHz-driver.png

Frequency response, input matching and reverse isolation:
https://hb9fsx.ch/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/distrib-amp-bode2.png

Distortion:
https://hb9fsx.ch/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/distrib-amp-fft.png


Since it uses OpAmps it is quite easy to design one stage for a particular 
desired input impedance. So one of the channels has 200 Ohms input impedance, 
and which results in 50 Ohms if 4 channels are paralleled - and thus the input 
and output impedances stay at 50 Ohms. So there is no need for a real 
"splitter".

So far I was not able to measure the residual phase noise of this distributor 
because I am still lacking a proper phase noise test set. (but it becomes 
better. I am currently making one. Hopefully I will finish someday :-)).


Tobias
HB9FSX



From: time-nuts [time-nuts-boun...@lists.febo.com] on behalf of Perry Sandeen 
via time-nuts [time-nuts@lists.febo.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 20, 2019 23:50
To: time-nuts@lists.febo.com
Cc: Perry Sandeen
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Distribution amplifier for 10MHz and 1 pps

Yo Bubba Dudes!
Wrote:
Gosh. This topic comes up at least once every 6 months. Adiligent search of the 
time-nuts database would turn up amazing things. . .
Yep, it does and it always will for at least two reasons.
One, we have new people joining the list.  Which is great. They're at the 
beginning of a learning curve and most aren't in the upper echelons of TN 
knowledge.  It's a hobby for them not an extension of their professional lives. 
 But they want to learn and make progress

New members aren't aware of the past data base of info, and speaking for myself 
I never found an easy way to search.  If there is an easy way to do so I'm 
willing to be taught.
I learn a lot from the posters even if it is far above my technical skills.  If 
I have no understanding or interest of post(s), I just delete it and keep what 
interests or is helpful to me.
That's as it should be, and hopefully always will be, on a list like this with 
such a diverse mix of members.
Now we all started spending 9 months in a nice warm water bath happily sucking 
our thumb.
Then some dude takes us out, turns us upside down, and slaps us on our butt 
while saying *Welcome to the world*!
Now what we think is: Say what sucker! I was perfectly happy where I was and 
minding by own business.
However, like it or not, we are then at the start of the unending learning 
curve until our lights goes out figuratively or literally.
Regards,
Perrier








___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.

___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread jimlux

On 3/20/19 11:42 PM, Warren Kumari wrote:

On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 7:05 AM Anders Wallin 
wrote:


We've tinkered with SFP-to-SMA adapter boards like this:
https://github.com/aewallin/SFP2SMA_2018.03
http://www.anderswallin.net/2018/04/500-mhz-sfp-board-v4/



And if you want a "ready made" solution instead of making the board
yourself, etc there is
http://shop.sysmocom.de/t/development-boards/sfp


I have some on order to play with, but am traveling, and so cannot play
with them yet.

W




This is very interesting stuff...
There have been times I was thinking "what I really need here is a 
optical link for the 10 or 100 MHz".. But "hundreds of dollars" was a 
bit steep.  This is starting to get more reasonable (still, about $200 
for a link, by the time you buy/assemble adapter boards, the $7 modules, 
and some fiber).


As far as the reprogramming goes (another comment on the list) - I 
understand that is to make the unit have some particular flavor 
SFP-wise.  If you were plugging them into a Cisco switch and all you had 
was ones configured for Juniper switches, then you'd want to do that. At 
the multikilobuck level to do this, you'd need a LOT of them to make it 
worthwhile.  The folks building radio telescope arrays with hundreds of 
cables probably fit in that use case.  A devoted time-nut using it to 
distribute their reference around the house or lab, probably not.








although designed for 1 Gbit (1.25 GHz, or 800 ps 'bits') they work down to
10 MHz (and 5 MHz IIRC).
With a decent interface-board and a short bit of fiber the ADEV noise floor
is very close to what is measurable with a 3120A (aka TimePod).
IIRC a rough rule-of-thumb is that the fiber can add around 1e-16/meter. So
add 1km of fibre and you can expect fluctuations at 1e-13 level -
roughly...

AW



___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread Gerhard Hoffmann


Am 21.03.19 um 07:27 schrieb Hal Murray:

jim...@earthlink.net said:

It seems like you could probably figure out how to interface to these  things
and use them to distribute timing signals.


The document is the "SFP MSA".  I still have the XFP version somewhere here.


I don't know how well they will work for something like a PPS.  Somebody
should try it.  The signal pattern is mostly trying to be friendly to the PLL
that does clock recovery and/or the AGC that sets up the switching level.

If I wanted to send a PPS, I'd use something simple like Manchester encoding.
That assumes you can line your transmit clock up with the PPS.  It won't work
if you just want a link-extender for a PPS.



Manchester should work. Simply trying to transmit a differential CML 
level 1pps won't do.


The signals are ac-coupled typically 100nF/50 Ohm right at the module 
border.


I was one of the ~5 people who did the electronics of the 10 GBPS XFP 
modules


at Infineon Fiber Optics (RIP, sold) and someone decreased the coupling

capacitors to 10n for a very minor advantage. It's 10 GBPS, pure RF 
after all.


No. That gave us 1 bit error per day (complete show stopper) and a month 
of delay.



I'm puzzled that it works so far off-frequency with these SFPs. In our 
10 GBPS XFPs


it would definitely not work. The eye opener at the input to the 
transmitter would


go nuts, and the receiver clock recovery would not work.


BTW our modules for Cisco had special contents in some registers to make 
sure


that nobody could use alien modules. There must have happened some

social engineering if I read the post above :-)


regards,

Gerhard


___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] Yet another GPSDO project.

2019-03-21 Thread Leo Bodnar
Tobias,
Have you measured resulting phase noise of the finished unit?
Thanks
Leo

> From: Tobias Pluess 
> sure, I believe you since my primary requirement was phase noise. This is 
> because I'd like to use the OCXO as reference for my spectrum analyzer and 
> also for my HP 8663 signal generator to do phase noise measurements 
___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread Warren Kumari
On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 8:00 AM Hal Murray  wrote:

>
> jim...@earthlink.net said:
> > It seems like you could probably figure out how to interface to these
> things
> > and use them to distribute timing signals.
>
> There are two big advantages of fibers:
>   They work well for long distances.
>   No ground loops.
>
> The target market for those contraptions is networking.  The signal is
> digital, and they get to work with a "nice" signal, probably 8B/10B.
> That's 8
> bits of data in 10 bits on the wire.  Roughly, they pick 256 out of 1024
> patterns that have minimal long strings of 0s and 1s and use a few more
> patterns for control - things like idle, and begin/end of packet.  It
> works
> fine if AC coupled.
>
> I don't know how well they will work for something like a PPS.  Somebody
> should try it.  The signal pattern is mostly trying to be friendly to the
> PLL
> that does clock recovery and/or the AGC that sets up the switching level.
>
> If I wanted to send a PPS, I'd use something simple like Manchester
> encoding.
> That assumes you can line your transmit clock up with the PPS.  It won't
> work
> if you just want a link-extender for a PPS.
>
> If you are connecting to a FPGA, use whatever they support for high-speed
> serial interface.  Again, that assumes you can line your signal up with
> the
> transmit clock.
>
> I'm pretty sure the signaling is differential, either PECL or one of the
> newer
> standards like LVDS.
>
>
> > They take a standard singlemode duplex fiber and have a pinout suitable
> for
> > plugging into a Cisco, etc. switch. Apparently, there's some ...
>
> I'm pretty sure none of the programming is on the high speed path.  Maybe
> changing the signal levels.  I don't know how much of it is total BS, aka
> vendor lock in, as compared to actually doing something useful.  I'd be
> surprised (but not much) if they didn't work fine with no programming.


Yup, the majority of the programming is assigning a "personality" (vendor
lock). There is sometimes also a small bit of config (some let you assign
minimum receive before it declares the link up, or (very unusual) the
frequency for tunable optics (usually this is tuned in the device, but some
let you assign in the SFP). AFAIK, all the ones you can easily purchase (eg
FS or flexoptix) come with at least some personality.

W



>
>
>
> --
> These are my opinions.  I hate spam.
>
>
>
>
> ___
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to
> http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
> and follow the instructions there.
>
-- 
I don't think the execution is relevant when it was obviously a bad idea in
the first place.
This is like putting rabid weasels in your pants, and later expressing
regret at having chosen those particular rabid weasels and that pair of
pants.
   ---maf
___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread Poul-Henning Kamp

In message <20190321062751.4c65b406...@ip-64-139-1-69.sjc.megapath.net>, Hal 
Murray writes:

>I don't know how well they will work for something like a PPS.  Somebody 
>should try it.  The signal pattern is mostly trying to be friendly to the PLL 
>that does clock recovery and/or the AGC that sets up the switching level.

If we are only inside a lab, look at TOSLINK which can be made to
do interesting stuff if you play a bit with it.

-- 
Poul-Henning Kamp   | UNIX since Zilog Zeus 3.20
p...@freebsd.org | TCP/IP since RFC 956
FreeBSD committer   | BSD since 4.3-tahoe
Never attribute to malice what can adequately be explained by incompetence.

___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread Julien Goodwin
On 21/3/19 5:27 pm, Hal Murray wrote:
> 
> jim...@earthlink.net said:
>> It seems like you could probably figure out how to interface to these  things
>> and use them to distribute timing signals. 
> 
> There are two big advantages of fibers:
>   They work well for long distances.
>   No ground loops.

Pure optical amplification, and multiplexing is also possible, less
useful for pure time & frequency use though.

However for long distance you start to get into fun issues like thermal
affects etc, and running something like Sync-E might actually make more
sense than a pure signal.

> The target market for those contraptions is networking.  The signal is 
> digital, and they get to work with a "nice" signal, probably 8B/10B.  That's 
> 8 
> bits of data in 10 bits on the wire.  Roughly, they pick 256 out of 1024 
> patterns that have minimal long strings of 0s and 1s and use a few more 
> patterns for control - things like idle, and begin/end of packet.  It works 
> fine if AC coupled.

8b/10b in the older signals up to 1g, 64b/66b in 10g. These days native
25g, 50g and more are combined to make 100g / 200g / 400g Ethernet.

> I don't know how well they will work for something like a PPS.  Somebody 
> should try it.  The signal pattern is mostly trying to be friendly to the PLL 
> that does clock recovery and/or the AGC that sets up the switching level.
> 
> If I wanted to send a PPS, I'd use something simple like Manchester encoding. 
>  
> That assumes you can line your transmit clock up with the PPS.  It won't work 
> if you just want a link-extender for a PPS.
> 
> If you are connecting to a FPGA, use whatever they support for high-speed 
> serial interface.  Again, that assumes you can line your signal up with the 
> transmit clock.
> 
> I'm pretty sure the signaling is differential, either PECL or one of the 
> newer 
> standards like LVDS.

Yep, all diff I/O, details are in the spec. Random sample:
http://www.kt.agh.edu.pl/~lason/SFP/TRX17/SCP6Gx8c.pdf

>> They take a standard singlemode duplex fiber and have a pinout suitable  for
>> plugging into a Cisco, etc. switch. Apparently, there's some ...
> 
> I'm pretty sure none of the programming is on the high speed path.  Maybe 
> changing the signal levels.  I don't know how much of it is total BS, aka 
> vendor lock in, as compared to actually doing something useful.  I'd be 
> surprised (but not much) if they didn't work fine with no programming.

Correct, the control path is out of band, and just I2C.

The lock in is almost entirely vendor profiteering, optical monitoring &
wavelength switching are standards (where implemented), but plenty of
vendors use (almost always trivially bypassable) lock-in to sell SFPs
they rebrand from the same OEMs at up to 100x markup.

The folk in the big telcos (or in my case, big content providers) who
run the global backbones have plenty of stories.

___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread Hal Murray


jim...@earthlink.net said:
> It seems like you could probably figure out how to interface to these  things
> and use them to distribute timing signals. 

There are two big advantages of fibers:
  They work well for long distances.
  No ground loops.

The target market for those contraptions is networking.  The signal is 
digital, and they get to work with a "nice" signal, probably 8B/10B.  That's 8 
bits of data in 10 bits on the wire.  Roughly, they pick 256 out of 1024 
patterns that have minimal long strings of 0s and 1s and use a few more 
patterns for control - things like idle, and begin/end of packet.  It works 
fine if AC coupled.

I don't know how well they will work for something like a PPS.  Somebody 
should try it.  The signal pattern is mostly trying to be friendly to the PLL 
that does clock recovery and/or the AGC that sets up the switching level.

If I wanted to send a PPS, I'd use something simple like Manchester encoding.  
That assumes you can line your transmit clock up with the PPS.  It won't work 
if you just want a link-extender for a PPS.

If you are connecting to a FPGA, use whatever they support for high-speed 
serial interface.  Again, that assumes you can line your signal up with the 
transmit clock.

I'm pretty sure the signaling is differential, either PECL or one of the newer 
standards like LVDS.


> They take a standard singlemode duplex fiber and have a pinout suitable  for
> plugging into a Cisco, etc. switch. Apparently, there's some ...

I'm pretty sure none of the programming is on the high speed path.  Maybe 
changing the signal levels.  I don't know how much of it is total BS, aka 
vendor lock in, as compared to actually doing something useful.  I'd be 
surprised (but not much) if they didn't work fine with no programming.



-- 
These are my opinions.  I hate spam.




___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread Warren Kumari
On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 7:05 AM Anders Wallin 
wrote:

> We've tinkered with SFP-to-SMA adapter boards like this:
> https://github.com/aewallin/SFP2SMA_2018.03
> http://www.anderswallin.net/2018/04/500-mhz-sfp-board-v4/
>

And if you want a "ready made" solution instead of making the board
yourself, etc there is
http://shop.sysmocom.de/t/development-boards/sfp


I have some on order to play with, but am traveling, and so cannot play
with them yet.

W


> although designed for 1 Gbit (1.25 GHz, or 800 ps 'bits') they work down to
> 10 MHz (and 5 MHz IIRC).
> With a decent interface-board and a short bit of fiber the ADEV noise floor
> is very close to what is measurable with a 3120A (aka TimePod).
> IIRC a rough rule-of-thumb is that the fiber can add around 1e-16/meter. So
> add 1km of fibre and you can expect fluctuations at 1e-13 level -
> roughly...
>
> AW
>
> On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 6:06 AM jimlux  wrote:
>
> > While researching this for a radio telescope, I found amazingly
> > inexpensive (<$10) fiber optic transceivers for 1Gbps sorts of rates..
> >
> > They take a standard singlemode duplex fiber and have a pinout suitable
> > for plugging into a Cisco, etc. switch. Apparently, there's some
> > internal programming which sets the hardware for the kind of switch,
> > rates, etc..  fs.com has a generic ASIC inside the adapter which can be
> > reprogrammed for whatever formatting, compatibility etc is needed. The
> > astronomers were saying that at Berkeley, they bought a box for a few k
> > which allows them to reconfigure the transceivers.
> >
> >
> > Something like this:
> > https://www.fs.com/products/12622.html
> >
> > Data sheet here:
> https://img-en.fs.com/file/datasheet/sfp1g-lx-31-10km.pdf
> >
> > and a 10 meter patch cable is $5
> > https://www.fs.com/products/40203.html
> >
> > This is sort of "old news" in the networking world (the SFP form factor
> > was defined in 2001)
> >
> >
> > It seems like you could probably figure out how to interface to these
> > things and use them to distribute timing signals.
> >
> > I'll be talking to the radio astronomers tomorrow again, and I'll see
> > what I can find out about interfaces. I suspect they do NOT use them for
> > conventional networking - they're all about running lots of bits from
> > antennas into large multichannel correlators/beamformers.
> >
> > They're buying these things by the dozen.
> >
> > ___
> > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
> > To unsubscribe, go to
> > http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
> > and follow the instructions there.
> >
> ___
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to
> http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
> and follow the instructions there.
>
-- 
I don't think the execution is relevant when it was obviously a bad idea in
the first place.
This is like putting rabid weasels in your pants, and later expressing
regret at having chosen those particular rabid weasels and that pair of
pants.
   ---maf
___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.


Re: [time-nuts] inexpensive fiber optic distribution

2019-03-21 Thread Anders Wallin
We've tinkered with SFP-to-SMA adapter boards like this:
https://github.com/aewallin/SFP2SMA_2018.03
http://www.anderswallin.net/2018/04/500-mhz-sfp-board-v4/

although designed for 1 Gbit (1.25 GHz, or 800 ps 'bits') they work down to
10 MHz (and 5 MHz IIRC).
With a decent interface-board and a short bit of fiber the ADEV noise floor
is very close to what is measurable with a 3120A (aka TimePod).
IIRC a rough rule-of-thumb is that the fiber can add around 1e-16/meter. So
add 1km of fibre and you can expect fluctuations at 1e-13 level - roughly...

AW

On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 6:06 AM jimlux  wrote:

> While researching this for a radio telescope, I found amazingly
> inexpensive (<$10) fiber optic transceivers for 1Gbps sorts of rates..
>
> They take a standard singlemode duplex fiber and have a pinout suitable
> for plugging into a Cisco, etc. switch. Apparently, there's some
> internal programming which sets the hardware for the kind of switch,
> rates, etc..  fs.com has a generic ASIC inside the adapter which can be
> reprogrammed for whatever formatting, compatibility etc is needed. The
> astronomers were saying that at Berkeley, they bought a box for a few k
> which allows them to reconfigure the transceivers.
>
>
> Something like this:
> https://www.fs.com/products/12622.html
>
> Data sheet here: https://img-en.fs.com/file/datasheet/sfp1g-lx-31-10km.pdf
>
> and a 10 meter patch cable is $5
> https://www.fs.com/products/40203.html
>
> This is sort of "old news" in the networking world (the SFP form factor
> was defined in 2001)
>
>
> It seems like you could probably figure out how to interface to these
> things and use them to distribute timing signals.
>
> I'll be talking to the radio astronomers tomorrow again, and I'll see
> what I can find out about interfaces. I suspect they do NOT use them for
> conventional networking - they're all about running lots of bits from
> antennas into large multichannel correlators/beamformers.
>
> They're buying these things by the dozen.
>
> ___
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to
> http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
> and follow the instructions there.
>
___
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@lists.febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to 
http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com
and follow the instructions there.