Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-05-20 Thread Chris Wilson
Hello, on 20/05/2015 15:56 you wrote: Chris wrote: can I T off the T/Thunderbolt 10MHz feed to this board and take a second sine wave output direct from the Thunderbolt, to drive a transceiver GPS disciplined 10 MHz frequency standard input as well as having it feed the divider baord The

Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output

2015-03-31 Thread Charles Steinmetz
Dave wrote: I'm not sure how to avoid the change in input impedance with the clipper involved unless I were to increase R1 to a very much higher value. The voltage noise density of a 3.3k resistor is about 7.5nV/rootHz, for a total noise of about 23uVrms in a 10MHz bandwidth (compared to

Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-29 Thread Brian Lloyd
On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 12:22 PM, Chris Wilson ch...@chriswilson.tv wrote: 27/03/2015 17:14 My T/Thunderbolt has operated flawlessly for some years feeding a David Partridge frequency divider board. The board gives 10Mhz and lower divisions of 10MHz down to the KHz level out, as square

Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-29 Thread d0ct0r
In my project, I was using LT6957 to share 10Mhz from my TBolt. It was perfectly fine for my setup. I split 10Mhz to feed the clock of MCU and second output was connected to DDS block (AD 9852). Regards, Vlad On , Chris Wilson wrote: 27/03/2015 17:14 My T/Thunderbolt has operated

Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-29 Thread Bob Camp
Hi So … what does the TBolt use to buffer the RF? Hmmm …. a logic gate. I wonder what would work in a gizmo to split the signal …. maybe a couple of logic buffers? Costs $1 for the parts. Works fine. Bob On Mar 29, 2015, at 9:57 AM, Brian Lloyd br...@lloyd.aero wrote: On Fri, Mar 27,

Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-28 Thread Charles Steinmetz
Dave wrote: ??? How do you get to that 45 ohm figure. The input has a pair of 100R in parallel, so I can't see how it can be 45R input impedance. Also in parallel with the 2x 100 ohm resistors (R2 and R3) is 10k (R5) in series with 100nF, plus 475 ohms (R1) to a pair of (parallel)

Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-28 Thread David C. Partridge
: Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output. Dave wrote: ??? How do you get to that 45 ohm figure. The input has a pair of 100R in parallel, so I can't see how it can be 45R input impedance. Also in parallel with the 2x 100 ohm resistors (R2 and R3) is 10k (R5) in series

Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-28 Thread Chris Wilson
Hello, on 28/03/2015 09:04 you wrote: Chris wrote: can I T off the T/Thunderbolt 10MHz feed to this board and take a second sine wave output direct from the Thunderbolt, to drive a transceiver GPS disciplined 10 MHz frequency standard input as well as having it feed the divider baord The

Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-28 Thread David C. Partridge
Charles The input impedance of the divider board is nominally 50 ohms (closer to 45 ohms, with 1Vrms drive ??? How do you get to that 45 ohm figure. The input has a pair of 100R in parallel, so I can't see how it can be 45R input impedance. Did you derive that figure based on observing

Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-28 Thread Chris Wilson
Hello, on 28/03/2015 09:09 you wrote: The telco equipment that all these Tbolts came from had the 10 Mhz output feed 2 different modules using a MicroCircuits ZFSC-2-1-S two-way 0° 50 ohm power splitter. There are some of these splitters for sale on Ebay but almost any other similar unit

Re: [time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-28 Thread Charles Steinmetz
Chris wrote: can I T off the T/Thunderbolt 10MHz feed to this board and take a second sine wave output direct from the Thunderbolt, to drive a transceiver GPS disciplined 10 MHz frequency standard input as well as having it feed the divider baord The input impedance of the divider board is

[time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-27 Thread Chris Wilson
27/03/2015 17:14 My T/Thunderbolt has operated flawlessly for some years feeding a David Partridge frequency divider board. The board gives 10Mhz and lower divisions of 10MHz down to the KHz level out, as square waves. What I need to know is, can I T off the T/Thunderbolt 10MHz feed to this

[time-nuts] Trimble Thunderbolt question, splitting its output.

2015-03-27 Thread Arthur Dent
The telco equipment that all these Tbolts came from had the 10 Mhz output feed 2 different modules using a MicroCircuits ZFSC-2-1-S two-way 0° 50 ohm power splitter. There are some of these splitters for sale on Ebay but almost any other similar unit should work.