Some time ago, I complained to the list about an HP 10811 from e-bay that was 
under frequency (apparently 
it was a non-production unit that somehow made it out of the factory along with 
a bunch of other somewhat-
less-than-production units.)

I figured it was a lost cause, so I took it apart just to have a look and do 
some tweaking.  I found that 
I couldn't swing the oscillator enough to get it close to 10MHz.  I thought, OK 
- it'll be a "parts" 
unit.  

Then I had a brainstorm: since it wasn't working anyway, why not sub out the 
crystal for one that is 
closer to 10MHz and see what would happen.  So, picking several 10MHz crystals 
out of my parts box, I 
tried a couple to see how they worked.  I thought I might get lucky and find 
one with a good temperature 
coefficient and not too much drift.  I thought it was a long shot, but it was 
dead anyway so no big loss 
if I screwed something up.

The first two xtals I tried were too drifty, but the third one seems to be much 
more stable.  I've had it 
in fired up for a few hours. The output looks good, and it seems to be staying 
put at 10MHz (as measured 
by my GPSDO disciplined 5328A.)

Now I know that it won't be as stable as the original fancy SC-cut crystal from 
HP, but it might be stable 
enough to use as a non-critical bench oscillator for experimenting, etc.  I'll 
keep it running for a while 
and monitor it's drift just to see if it stays good(or if it dies a smoky 
death.)

Anyway, I wanted to say thanks to the folks on the list for their encouragement 
and experimental spirit.  
I siphoned off enough courage from you folks to open up the device and play 
with it.

Great fun!

Mark
 


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