Hi

Does your rubidium put out a pps? Do you have any counter capable of time 
interval (time channel 1 to channel 2) measurement?

Something like a 5334 is a pretty common item, and they are cheap if you need 
to get one. Feed the pps into the "start" channel. Feed the generator into the 
"stop" channel. The time interval measured will distribute over the period of 
the generator output. At first glance the data will look like junk. You need to 
post process it to "unwrap" the delta phase readings. Your data will be once a 
second and only good to a couple ns. 

Taking your original frequency, the period would be 135.83… ns.  A perfect 
setup would only report data in the 0 to 135.83 ns range. Real counters are 
never quite perfect, so you will probably not get 0 and you probably will get 
136 or 137 ns. You might also get negative numbers. A lot depends on your 
counter. The first thing is to fold the data into the proper range. Next is to 
make a reasonable guess when you go from say 121 ns to 13 ns. That's the phase 
unwrapping process. Once you've done that, you have a phase record (delta phase 
once a second) that you can feed into Stable-32. There likely will be a bit 
more fiddling on real data, but that's the basics.

Bob

On Mar 19, 2013, at 6:08 PM, John Doering <[email protected]> wrote:

> Bob,
> 
> I am a grad student working part time for a frequency generator
> distributor. For the most part, it's just buy/resell so we don't do
> production sized testing, rather specific tests when it's too expensive to
> outsource or we already have the necessary setup. However, we've had quite
> a few requests for TDEV & MTIE analysis, so we started looking into ways to
> do it in house for the future. I've been seeing a wealth of information on
> these boards, figured it was worth a shot to ask.
> 
> It's not a garage operation budget, but the size of the company doesn't
> permit for more expensive pieces of equipment either (like the symmetricoms
> that run for 25-30k)
> 
> I do most of the instrument and test application programming. For stability
> processing, we use stable32.
> 
> John
> _______________________________________________
> 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.

_______________________________________________
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.

Reply via email to