Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-21 Thread Rick Karlquist
The 5071 cesium has no measurable environmental sensitivity to
temperature, pressure, or humidity, down to a measurement threshold
of 1 part in 10^15.

The 5061 cesium had various environmental sensitivies due to the
harmonic generator.  This generator was far more efficient than
any other I have studied (and I spent too much time working on
SRD frequency multipliers).  It was designed by a Korean professor
and no one at HP really understood the magic in it.  Being so
highly optimized, it was fairly temperamental.  Also, the joints
leaked RF due to silver tarnishing, etc.  Thus RF leaking out then
back in could be affected by the environment or removing the top
cover.  The 5061 had a frequency coefficient of microwave power that
doesn't exist in the 5071.  It wouldn't surprise me if humidity
affected the 5061, although I don't have any direct evidence of it.

Rick Karlquist N6RK



Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Richard
> \(Ric
> k\) Karlquist" writes:
>
> Wasn't humidity also the main source of trouble with the cesiums ?
>
> --
> Poul-Henning Kamp   | UNIX since Zilog Zeus 3.20
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] | TCP/IP since RFC 956
> FreeBSD committer   | BSD since 4.3-tahoe
> Never attribute to malice what can adequately be explained by
> incompetence.
>
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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-21 Thread Poul-Henning Kamp
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Richard \(Ric
k\) Karlquist" writes:

Wasn't humidity also the main source of trouble with the cesiums ?

-- 
Poul-Henning Kamp   | UNIX since Zilog Zeus 3.20
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | TCP/IP since RFC 956
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Never attribute to malice what can adequately be explained by incompetence.

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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Richard \(Rick\) Karlquist
The crystal is definitely hermetic.  I am pretty
sure it is not thermal and is not related to the
oven.  It is not even the transistor because it
is also hermetic (not so much by design but more
an accident of it being a legacy design).  The
#1 suspect would be the piston trimmer that adjusts
the frequency.  Early on in the development of
the 10811, they had a bad problem with aging that
turned out to be lubricant in the piston trimmer.
They switched to unlubricated trimmers.  The varactor
diode might also be a possible source of drift.

Rick Karlquist N6RK

> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Behalf Of Hal Murray
> Sent: Tuesday, June 20, 2006 7:45 PM
> To: time-nuts@febo.com
> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc
>
>
>
> > Yes, I did, because nobody else had, and I was curious. We were seeing
> > changes along the lines of parts in 10^8, about an order of magnitude
> > worse than tempco.  This was for something like dry nitrogen purge all
> > night vs 50 degrees C, 90% humidity for an hour or two.
>
> Does anybody understand the mechanism?
>
> I assume the actual crystal itself is sealed.  I'd guess that
> something in
> the control electronics in humidity sensitive.  Do FR4 boards change size
> with humidity?
>
> Is the thermal conductivity of humid air enough different from dry air to
> change the internal temperature of various parts?
>
> --
> The suespammers.org mail server is located in California.  So are all my
> other mailboxes.  Please do not send unsolicited bulk e-mail or
> unsolicited
> commercial e-mail to my suespammers.org address or any of my
> other addresses.
> These are my opinions, not necessarily my employer's.  I hate spam.
>
>
>
>
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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Tom Clark, K3IO

   TVB noted:

If you are using the 10811 as part of a GPSDO the PLL
should take care of any number of slow-moving changes
in frequency; whether it's temperature, humidity, voltage,
OCXO ageing, DAC drift, phase-of-the-moon, etc.

So I don't see a compelling need to "protect" the OCXO
in the ways being proposed.

If you are in a harsh, or fast-changing environment then
do the math to see if your OCXO dF/dt exceeds what the
PLL can close relative to the dF/dt of the GPS reference.
  

   There are several elements of the GPSDO that can have sever
   temperature sensitivity:
1. The GPS receiver itself. Of particular concern is the group delay
   thru the ~2 MHz wide IF filters and also the several MHz wide
   filters in the RF front-end. The IF filters are often SAW (Surface
   Acoustic Wave) devices, and the RF  bandpass filters are
   frequently coaxial ceramic devices (functionally similar to tuned
   cavities, but built inside high dielectric constant ceramic). I
   have seen tempco's of as much as a few nsec/ºC for some brands of
   receiver boards.
2. The GPS antenna. Most systems employ patch antennas which are
   manufactured with ceramic dielectric loading of the patch
   elements. Since these are located outdoors, they can see several
   tens ºC temperature swing throughout a day.
3. Most GPSDOs use a fairly long divider to bring the standard
   oscillator down from 10 MHz to 1 PPS. If you use ripple counters
   for these dividers, they will show a significant temperature
   sensitivity. I once used a string of 3½ 74HC390's to bring 10 MHz
   down to 1PPS and was appalled to find several hundred nsec of
   delay change with ambient temperature in a trailer. But when you
   realize that 7 BCD counters with 4 flip-flops each account for
   something like 72 CMOS gates, each with a tempco ~1 ns/ºC, the
   results were not surprising. The moral to this story is that the
   counters in your GPSDO should be synchronous counters. Better
   still, I found that TVB's single chip PIC divider had unmeasurable
   temperature effects.

   I would be surprised if you find a significant humidity or pressure
   pull unless you have a problem with moisture condensing on some
   component; the dielectric constant of liquid water (or ice) differs
   significantly from unity!
   73, Tom
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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Brooke Clarke
Hi Rick:

Thanks for pointing that out.  Maybe the factor is air density.  I know 
air density was the thing we used to monitor to jet the carbs in racing 
cars.
It was better than using a barometer and/or thermometer.

Have Fun,

Brooke Clarke

-- 
w/Java http://www.PRC68.com
w/o Java http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/PRC68COM.shtml
http://www.precisionclock.com



Rick Karlquist wrote:

>You must be kidding.  No way are Zip Lok bags hermetic.
>Water vapor will diffuse right through.  (Note that waterproof
>does not equal hermetic).
>
>Rick N6RK
>
>
>Brooke Clarke wrote:
>  
>
>>HI Rick:
>>
>>For humidity control in other applications I have used Zip-Lok bags.
>>How about putting the 10811 in a Zip-Lok bag and run the wires through a
>>hole that gets epoxy sealed?  Some desiccant would lower the humidity if
>>that is an advantage.
>>
>>Have Fun,
>>
>>Brooke Clarke
>>
>>--
>>w/Java http://www.PRC68.com
>>w/o Java http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/PRC68COM.shtml
>>http://www.precisionclock.com
>>
>>
>>
>>Richard (Rick) Karlquist wrote:
>>
>>
>>
Given that HP's engineers have done such a good job with
the oven and oscillator design, is there anything to be gained
by adding extra thermal insulation (lagging)?  How much




>>>Not a good idea.  The best thing you could do to improve
>>>temp stability of a 10811 is to tweak the resistors that
>>>proportion the power between the two heater transistors.
>>>At some ratio, the thermal gain will peak at over 1000
>>>typically.  If you just take pot luck, you would be lucky
>>>to do 100.  You are still limited by the tempco of the
>>>electronics, no matter what thermal gain you achieve at
>>>the crystal.
>>>
>>>You should also be aware that the 10811 is fairly humidity
>>>sensitive, which can seem like temperature sensitivity
>>>if the humidity and temperature change together.
>>>
>>>The HP E1938 was a much better design in terms of environmental
>>>insensitivity, but that didn't help much because the
>>>ultimate stability was limited by crystal frequency jumps,
>>>which didn't seem so bad with the 10811 due to the large
>>>environment errors in it.  In the E1938 they stuck out like
>>>a sore thumb.
>>>
>>>Rick Karlquist N6RK
>>>
>>>
>>>  
>>>


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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Hal Murray

> Yes, I did, because nobody else had, and I was curious. We were seeing
> changes along the lines of parts in 10^8, about an order of magnitude
> worse than tempco.  This was for something like dry nitrogen purge all
> night vs 50 degrees C, 90% humidity for an hour or two. 

Does anybody understand the mechanism?

I assume the actual crystal itself is sealed.  I'd guess that something in 
the control electronics in humidity sensitive.  Do FR4 boards change size 
with humidity?

Is the thermal conductivity of humid air enough different from dry air to 
change the internal temperature of various parts?

-- 
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other mailboxes.  Please do not send unsolicited bulk e-mail or unsolicited
commercial e-mail to my suespammers.org address or any of my other addresses.
These are my opinions, not necessarily my employer's.  I hate spam.




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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Didier Juges
Water vapor is actual water, simply in gas form, so if the temperature 
drops quickly after a high humidity day, the vapor inside the bag will 
condense before it has time to escape and you will get actual water in 
liquid form in the bag, in the form of condensation.
Easy to do in Florida, happens every afternoon in the summer.
I suspect your humidity sensor peaks at 95% because of hardware/software 
limitations, not because of conditions inside the bag.

Didier

Neon John wrote:

>On Tue, 20 Jun 2006 17:54:46 -0700 (PDT),
>
>
>Actual water can't penetrate the bag so when the humidity is
>condensing, the inside-the-bag unit peaks at about 95%.
>
>
>John
>  
>


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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Joseph Gray
> packaging machinery design.  The sugar wafer used in that product was
> highly hygroscopic.  The main reason that product failed was that we
> weren't able to achieve sufficient shelf life despite trying all sorts
> of quite expensive multi-layer metallized wrapping "paper".  Even the
> multi-layer metallized stuff was moisture-permeable enough that the
> wafer would go soggy after a couple of weeks.
>
> John
> >
> >Rick N6RK

Have you noticed that in recent years, Pop Tarts come in aluminized mylar
pouches? I always find this a rather humorous use of space technology.


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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Neon John
On Tue, 20 Jun 2006 17:54:46 -0700 (PDT), "Rick Karlquist"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>You must be kidding.  No way are Zip Lok bags hermetic.
>Water vapor will diffuse right through.  (Note that waterproof
>does not equal hermetic).

I have some empirical data to back this up.  I recently bought a combo
"atomic clock"/weather station.  The remote temperature sensor also
contains a humidity sensor.  Without thinking, I put the transmitter
in a (heavy) freezer zip-lock bag and installed it in the NWS-style
shaded enclosure that also houses more conventional temperature and
humidity transmitters.

I was scratching my head for a couple of days for why the new humidity
reading almost exactly tracked the more expensive unit but with a
delay of about 4 hours.  Then it dawned on me about the bag.  Ambient
water vapor can diffuse through the plastic and reach equilibrium with
the outside in about 4 hours.  Out of the bag, the cheap sensor trails
the chilled mirror unit by 30 mins or so.

Actual water can't penetrate the bag so when the humidity is
condensing, the inside-the-bag unit peaks at about 95%.

FWIW, to put good moisture hermetic sealing in perspective, many moons
ago I worked as a design engineer for M&M Mars, the candy company.  I
was involved in the Summit bar (remember that one?) production line
packaging machinery design.  The sugar wafer used in that product was
highly hygroscopic.  The main reason that product failed was that we
weren't able to achieve sufficient shelf life despite trying all sorts
of quite expensive multi-layer metallized wrapping "paper".  Even the
multi-layer metallized stuff was moisture-permeable enough that the
wafer would go soggy after a couple of weeks.

John
>
>Rick N6RK
>
>
>Brooke Clarke wrote:
>> HI Rick:
>>
>> For humidity control in other applications I have used Zip-Lok bags.
>> How about putting the 10811 in a Zip-Lok bag and run the wires through a
>> hole that gets epoxy sealed?  Some desiccant would lower the humidity if
>> that is an advantage.
>>
>> Have Fun,
>>
>> Brooke Clarke
>>
>> --
>> w/Java http://www.PRC68.com
>> w/o Java http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/PRC68COM.shtml
>> http://www.precisionclock.com
>>
>>
>>
>> Richard (Rick) Karlquist wrote:
>>
Given that HP's engineers have done such a good job with
the oven and oscillator design, is there anything to be gained
by adding extra thermal insulation (lagging)?  How much


>>>
>>>Not a good idea.  The best thing you could do to improve
>>>temp stability of a 10811 is to tweak the resistors that
>>>proportion the power between the two heater transistors.
>>>At some ratio, the thermal gain will peak at over 1000
>>>typically.  If you just take pot luck, you would be lucky
>>>to do 100.  You are still limited by the tempco of the
>>>electronics, no matter what thermal gain you achieve at
>>>the crystal.
>>>
>>>You should also be aware that the 10811 is fairly humidity
>>>sensitive, which can seem like temperature sensitivity
>>>if the humidity and temperature change together.
>>>
>>>The HP E1938 was a much better design in terms of environmental
>>>insensitivity, but that didn't help much because the
>>>ultimate stability was limited by crystal frequency jumps,
>>>which didn't seem so bad with the 10811 due to the large
>>>environment errors in it.  In the E1938 they stuck out like
>>>a sore thumb.
>>>
>>>Rick Karlquist N6RK
>>>
>>>
>>>___
>>>time-nuts mailing list
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>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
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>
>
>
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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Rick Karlquist
You must be kidding.  No way are Zip Lok bags hermetic.
Water vapor will diffuse right through.  (Note that waterproof
does not equal hermetic).

Rick N6RK


Brooke Clarke wrote:
> HI Rick:
>
> For humidity control in other applications I have used Zip-Lok bags.
> How about putting the 10811 in a Zip-Lok bag and run the wires through a
> hole that gets epoxy sealed?  Some desiccant would lower the humidity if
> that is an advantage.
>
> Have Fun,
>
> Brooke Clarke
>
> --
> w/Java http://www.PRC68.com
> w/o Java http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/PRC68COM.shtml
> http://www.precisionclock.com
>
>
>
> Richard (Rick) Karlquist wrote:
>
>>>Given that HP's engineers have done such a good job with
>>>the oven and oscillator design, is there anything to be gained
>>>by adding extra thermal insulation (lagging)?  How much
>>>
>>>
>>
>>Not a good idea.  The best thing you could do to improve
>>temp stability of a 10811 is to tweak the resistors that
>>proportion the power between the two heater transistors.
>>At some ratio, the thermal gain will peak at over 1000
>>typically.  If you just take pot luck, you would be lucky
>>to do 100.  You are still limited by the tempco of the
>>electronics, no matter what thermal gain you achieve at
>>the crystal.
>>
>>You should also be aware that the 10811 is fairly humidity
>>sensitive, which can seem like temperature sensitivity
>>if the humidity and temperature change together.
>>
>>The HP E1938 was a much better design in terms of environmental
>>insensitivity, but that didn't help much because the
>>ultimate stability was limited by crystal frequency jumps,
>>which didn't seem so bad with the 10811 due to the large
>>environment errors in it.  In the E1938 they stuck out like
>>a sore thumb.
>>
>>Rick Karlquist N6RK
>>
>>
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>>
>
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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Rick Karlquist
Yes, I did, because nobody else had, and I was curious.
We were seeing changes along the lines of parts
in 10^8, about an order of magnitude worse than tempco.  This
was for something like dry nitrogen purge all night vs 50 degrees
C, 90% humidity for an hour or two.

After these horrible tests, I decided that the E1938 would
definitely be hermetic.

Rick N6RK

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Rick-
>
> You've peaked my interest. Has anyone ever collected any
> data on 10811 frequency vs. humidity or dew point?
>
> -Brian, WA1ZMS
>
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Behalf Of Richard (Rick) Karlquist
> Sent: Tuesday, June 20, 2006 1:03 AM
> To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc
>
>
>> Given that HP's engineers have done such a good job with
>> the oven and oscillator design, is there anything to be gained
>> by adding extra thermal insulation (lagging)?  How much
>
> Not a good idea.  The best thing you could do to improve
> temp stability of a 10811 is to tweak the resistors that
> proportion the power between the two heater transistors.
> At some ratio, the thermal gain will peak at over 1000
> typically.  If you just take pot luck, you would be lucky
> to do 100.  You are still limited by the tempco of the
> electronics, no matter what thermal gain you achieve at
> the crystal.
>
> You should also be aware that the 10811 is fairly humidity
> sensitive, which can seem like temperature sensitivity
> if the humidity and temperature change together.
>
> The HP E1938 was a much better design in terms of environmental
> insensitivity, but that didn't help much because the
> ultimate stability was limited by crystal frequency jumps,
> which didn't seem so bad with the 10811 due to the large
> environment errors in it.  In the E1938 they stuck out like
> a sore thumb.
>
> Rick Karlquist N6RK
>
>
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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Tom Van Baak
> So if the 10811 is placed in a temperature and humidity controlled 
> environment it will do better-just don't apply lagging etc in close 
> round the actual oven assy itself?
> 
> Presume the aim is to have the humidity as low as possible?
> 
> What about the room temperature?  I suppose the 'sweet point' depends 
> on the indivdual 10811 unit?
> 
> DaveB
> Christchurch,
> NZ

If you are using the 10811 as part of a GPSDO the PLL
should take care of any number of slow-moving changes
in frequency; whether it's temperature, humidity, voltage,
OCXO ageing, DAC drift, phase-of-the-moon, etc.

So I don't see a compelling need to "protect" the OCXO
in the ways being proposed.

If you are in a harsh, or fast-changing environment then
do the math to see if your OCXO dF/dt exceeds what the
PLL can close relative to the dF/dt of the GPS reference.

/tvb



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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Brooke Clarke
HI Rick:

For humidity control in other applications I have used Zip-Lok bags.  
How about putting the 10811 in a Zip-Lok bag and run the wires through a 
hole that gets epoxy sealed?  Some desiccant would lower the humidity if 
that is an advantage.

Have Fun,

Brooke Clarke

-- 
w/Java http://www.PRC68.com
w/o Java http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/PRC68COM.shtml
http://www.precisionclock.com



Richard (Rick) Karlquist wrote:

>>Given that HP's engineers have done such a good job with
>>the oven and oscillator design, is there anything to be gained
>>by adding extra thermal insulation (lagging)?  How much
>>
>>
>
>Not a good idea.  The best thing you could do to improve
>temp stability of a 10811 is to tweak the resistors that
>proportion the power between the two heater transistors.
>At some ratio, the thermal gain will peak at over 1000
>typically.  If you just take pot luck, you would be lucky
>to do 100.  You are still limited by the tempco of the 
>electronics, no matter what thermal gain you achieve at
>the crystal. 
>
>You should also be aware that the 10811 is fairly humidity
>sensitive, which can seem like temperature sensitivity
>if the humidity and temperature change together.
>
>The HP E1938 was a much better design in terms of environmental
>insensitivity, but that didn't help much because the 
>ultimate stability was limited by crystal frequency jumps,
>which didn't seem so bad with the 10811 due to the large
>environment errors in it.  In the E1938 they stuck out like
>a sore thumb.
>
>Rick Karlquist N6RK
> 
>
>___
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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread Dave Brown

- Original Message - 
From: "Richard (Rick) Karlquist" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" 

Sent: Tuesday, June 20, 2006 5:03 PM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc


> Not a good idea.  The best thing you could do to improve
> temp stability of a 10811 is to tweak the resistors that
> proportion the power between the two heater transistors.
> At some ratio, the thermal gain will peak at over 1000
> typically.  If you just take pot luck, you would be lucky
> to do 100.  You are still limited by the tempco of the
> electronics, no matter what thermal gain you achieve at
> the crystal.
>
> You should also be aware that the 10811 is fairly humidity
> sensitive, which can seem like temperature sensitivity
> if the humidity and temperature change together.


So if the 10811 is placed in a temperature and humidity controlled 
environment it will do better-just don't apply lagging etc in close 
round the actual oven assy itself?

Presume the aim is to have the humidity as low as possible?

What about the room temperature?  I suppose the 'sweet point' depends 
on the indivdual 10811 unit?

DaveB
Christchurch,
NZ




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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-20 Thread wa1zms
Rick-

You've peaked my interest. Has anyone ever collected any
data on 10811 frequency vs. humidity or dew point?

-Brian, WA1ZMS

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Behalf Of Richard (Rick) Karlquist
Sent: Tuesday, June 20, 2006 1:03 AM
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc


> Given that HP's engineers have done such a good job with
> the oven and oscillator design, is there anything to be gained
> by adding extra thermal insulation (lagging)?  How much

Not a good idea.  The best thing you could do to improve
temp stability of a 10811 is to tweak the resistors that
proportion the power between the two heater transistors.
At some ratio, the thermal gain will peak at over 1000
typically.  If you just take pot luck, you would be lucky
to do 100.  You are still limited by the tempco of the 
electronics, no matter what thermal gain you achieve at
the crystal. 

You should also be aware that the 10811 is fairly humidity
sensitive, which can seem like temperature sensitivity
if the humidity and temperature change together.

The HP E1938 was a much better design in terms of environmental
insensitivity, but that didn't help much because the 
ultimate stability was limited by crystal frequency jumps,
which didn't seem so bad with the 10811 due to the large
environment errors in it.  In the E1938 they stuck out like
a sore thumb.

Rick Karlquist N6RK
 

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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-19 Thread Richard \(Rick\) Karlquist
> Given that HP's engineers have done such a good job with
> the oven and oscillator design, is there anything to be gained
> by adding extra thermal insulation (lagging)?  How much

Not a good idea.  The best thing you could do to improve
temp stability of a 10811 is to tweak the resistors that
proportion the power between the two heater transistors.
At some ratio, the thermal gain will peak at over 1000
typically.  If you just take pot luck, you would be lucky
to do 100.  You are still limited by the tempco of the 
electronics, no matter what thermal gain you achieve at
the crystal. 

You should also be aware that the 10811 is fairly humidity
sensitive, which can seem like temperature sensitivity
if the humidity and temperature change together.

The HP E1938 was a much better design in terms of environmental
insensitivity, but that didn't help much because the 
ultimate stability was limited by crystal frequency jumps,
which didn't seem so bad with the 10811 due to the large
environment errors in it.  In the E1938 they stuck out like
a sore thumb.

Rick Karlquist N6RK
 

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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-17 Thread SAIDJACK
Hi Brian,
 
I went through what you are about to embark upon.
 
Some comments:
 
   * My 10811A has about +-2Hz EFC adjustment range 0-5V. I used  the 
mechanical adjust to have about 0Hz offset at 2.5V EFC.
 
 Make sure your voltage reference for your DAC is temperature stable  (<5ppm 
per Celcius), otherwise the error is from the DAC/Reference, not the  OCXO. It 
is best to somehow put the DAC and DAC-reference inside an oven as  well, or 
at least thermally connect it to the oven case etc, so that it doesen't  
experience your expected 35 Deg C changes.
 
   * Insulating the oven does help slow down the effects of  thermal changes, 
but don't overdo it because at high temperatures in the summer  you don't 
want to have the heater turn off completely, and the oven "overheat"  itself 
just 
from the internal power consumption of the oscillator itself. Thus  you 
always want some thermal energy to escape through your insulation even at  the 
highest expected ambient temperatures.
 
   * Buffer the sine output to mitigate the effects of loading on  the OCXO
 
   * Provide a clean, temperature compensated power supply to the  OCXO.
 
A trick to use: measure the oven current. It should always vary with temp  
changes, if it stops varying and stays constant while the temp is still rising  
the oven is temp-saturated.
 
Good luck,
Said
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Re: [time-nuts] 10811 Extra Lagging etc

2006-06-17 Thread Tim Shoppa
Brian O'Connor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I note that Shera's QST article refers to using the 1 MHz
> output from a HP5328A.  Is there any degradation of
> performance or increased thermal sensitivity due to the use
> of a HP marked 7490 (ripple counter) to divide down to 1 MHz?
> Would use of a synchronous divider or the TVB PIC approach
> yield a worthwhile improvement?

Don't forget the various ring-counter implementations, too.
Everybody unfortunately always focuses on the binary counters
(35 years ago it was true too! Look at all the hobbyist articles
in the 70's based around 7490's...)

TVB's PIC approach has a lot of leverage for high and funky division
ratios but for divide-by-10 there's the good old CD4017 (actually
a ring counter with decoded states) and faster modern versions like
the 74HC4017 et al. For the propogation delay minimization purist
I suppose the decoded states take away points, but for them there's
the 6-stage shift register DIP's.

Tim.

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