Bottom line, the adjustment via the controller had no effect on this
accuracy issue. I ended up changing out the TCXO with a new one
and..problem solved. No noticeable drift on more than one week. I
guess I must have fried the first one during the building of the
clock.
On Sep 24, 11:14 am,
I think that you should have found (unless your clock goes through radical
changes in temperature) that there was a time correction that you could
apply to make your clock behave close enough.. Obviously a TCXO is the
easiest answer, provided you have $10 to spend on a DS32khz (or know that
The clock did not seem to respond in any way, even to significant
changes in the SW adjustment which led me to believe something was
hosed!
Yep. I'm with you on the Maxim sample thing!
On Oct 30, 12:06 pm, Adam Jacobs a...@jacobs.us wrote:
I think that you should have found (unless your clock
$10? That is by far worth it considering the time saving in labor alone.
:)
Glad you got your clock running. Now you have time for the next project.
Michail
In a message dated 10/30/2010 12:37:33 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
mbari...@dslextreme.com writes:
provided you have
I remember my old TV when I would spin through the channels (2-13).
My Dad would yell at me, You're going to break it. Don't spin the dial
like that.
You brought back memories. Wonder if anyone has ever broken their TV by
changing the channels.
Anyone remember the clicker that would