Hi Brian, guys, I think the original thread stated something like "how to use a GPSDO as a voltage reference". To this I have a couple of suggestions for tinkering (not sure if this has been suggested before): 1) Most OCXO's have an internal Zener reference voltage that is located inside the oven, and thus extremely stable. This voltage is usually on the center pin on a Eurocan OCXO, and it is meant to drive a pot that can be used to trim the crystal frequency. Thus your GPSDO may just give you a free ovenized Zener reference already. The better the OCXO, the better the reference typically. Absolute voltage will be different from unit to unit though. High-end double oven units can be expected to have the best performance. _____________________ 2) If we have a well aged GPSDO OCXO with extremely small aging (such as the Jackson Labs Fury GPSDO unit in Mexico: _http://resco.ucol.mx/Fury/gpsstat.htm_ (http://resco.ucol.mx/Fury/gpsstat.htm) , and it does not jump (this one does from time to time), then the control voltage of this OCXO can be used as a reference voltage with very high stability. Number 2) would be generating a voltage directly from locking to a frequency (UTC), so it would fulfill the premise of generating a voltage from a frequency :) This method only works if the OCXO has extremely small aging, the GPSDO has a very high resolution DAC (the Fury has 330nV lsb DAC resolution for example) and the OCXO does not jump. Some SC-cut OCXO's have close to zero aging after months of operation, so maybe you are lucky to have one of these. You can see that the unit in Mexico typically has a DAC variation of +/-20uV over the period of a day at 2.80055V, this includes the DAC/Reference stability errors of course, so the actual voltage variation may be less than this. Note that by locking to GPS, the method in 2) corrects for the temperature sensitivity of the external DAC and DAC reference! The absolute OCXO EFC voltage is somewhat arbitrary of course, but the stability could be excellent depending on your OCXO aging. Due to the OCXO aging affecting the measurement this may not be a perfect solution, but it does generate a voltage from a frequency, and many folks may have access to old OCXO's that do not age much at all anymore. bye, Said In a message dated 11/29/2008 01:33:02 Pacific Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Maybe we should consider coming up with a standard voltage reference as a TAPR project. We have a lot of good brainpower out here and it seems a lot of experience available. Brian - KD4FM _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.
