Fellow Time-Nuts,

I am having great fun with Ulrich's EZGPIB and Plotter programs to automate my 
ADEV and TI measurements. Wow, what a nice set of programs, thanks Ulrich!

I use the SR620 TIC with a Fury board as an external reference. The Fury 
disciplines an 10811-60168 external oscillator. I can go unlocked to improve 
the range around Tau 100s if and when necessary. For a series of tests, I used 
an LPRO-101 10Mhz signal to drive B-Ch (Stop) of the SR620; the A-Ch (Start) 
was set to Ref. for a Zero-Crossing TIME measurement on the TIC. I streamlined 
the EZGPIB SR620 query program and experimented with counter settings to 
minimize the inevitable and inherent latencies of the computer layers, network, 
GPIB-Enet/100 bridge and the counter (counter being the worst). With the 
counter set to 100 samples and the 1KHz "Ref" being used as the START, I was 
expecting a new, 100 sample TI average, every 0.1 seconds. My first evidence of 
something not being ideal was embedded in the details of the EZGPIB output 
console and accompanying file. Sometimes there were 7, 8 or 9 samples per 
second of time and never 10. Also, the total time span of a large collection of 
samples was always slightly longer than the product of the sample rate and 
count. I used Excel to scan 18000, 0.1s TI samples to determine what the actual 
statistics might be:

Average = 0.122302796 sec
Min = 0.188015099 sec
Max = 0.108984648 sec

Since the ADEV function as well as Ulrich's Plotter program requires a constant 
Tau-0, I experimented with the nominal 0.1s and the real "average" of 0.1223s 
Tau-0 setting and attached a graph that illustrates the variance across Tau. My 
question is; what is "acceptable" practice for defining Tau-0 when the 
likelihood of having a stable sampling interval is difficult. It was rather 
simple to specify a more accurate time sample interval once determined by the 
extra step of spreadsheet analysis and the effect on the results is obvious. 
But that is still, only an average. What about the effect of the deviation 
about the average value? It would seem that would be a much more complex issue 
to deal with.

See attached export or Plotter graphic.

Regards...
Don

Attachment: Tau-0 Correction Variance.pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document

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