Thank you everyone for your input on the topic of the 10 MHz sinewave output 
being in phase with the UTC 1 pps output.

My customers actually want the 10 MHz zero crossing to coincide with the 1 pps 
rising edge.

That's what I really mean in my first question.  That has been answered thanks.

But so far, on all the GPSDO's I've tested, the 10 MHz sinewave drifts in phase 
wrt the 1 pps pulse, even if the 1 pps pulse is derived from that sinewave!

There are different reasons for this.  For example, many GPSDO's have 
distribution amplifiers with LC filters.  The LC filter will cause the phase of 
the 10 MHz sinewave to drift with temperature.  

Another reason is that many GPSDO use the GPS receivers raw 1 pps as their UTC 
aligned output.

Then they use the same 1 pps signal to discipline the 10 MHz oscillator.

However, the 1 pps is only used to discipline the frequency of the 10 MHz, not 
the phase.

This is how it is done on some of the lower cost GPSDO units (and my first 
design fifteen years ago).

The same problem goes with distribution amplifiers.  Many distribution 
amplifiers change the phase of the 10 MHz signal over time and temperature.  
Most customers don't know this happens and don't care, as they are only 
interested in an accurate frequency.

If a customer is interested in stable phase in a distribution amplifier, they 
must make sure the amplifier is phase stable.  

Martyn
_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts

Reply via email to