Hi

Full blown, troublesome OCXO set procedure:

1) Touch the adjustment gizmo with your tuning tool. Don't adjust it. Watch the 
frequency, does it bounce? (change over several minutes). If so, your tuning 
tool is cooling off the oven. Find a lower thermal conductivity tool.

2) Take a toothpick, Push on the trimmer. Does the frequency move? If so, you 
likely have a broken / worn / cheap trimmer. Adjustment will take a long time. 

3) Mark your tuning tool, mark the adjustment hole, call that point zero. Track 
your adjustments relative to that point. 

4) Let the 5110 warm up for at least a couple of days. Record the frequency. 
Wait a day or two and check it again. If it's not settled wait a bit more. The 
normal approach with this box when new was to leave it on all the time. 

Now you're ready to adjust the OCXO. Record the frequency, rotate the trimmer 
1/8 turn clockwise. Watch what happens for at least a couple of minutes. Maybe 
it goes from +3 to +3.5 Hz relative to 10 MHz. What matters here is the start 
and finish frequencies, not what it does in-between. Rotate it back 1/8 turn. 
I'm guessing it goes from 3.5 to 3.2 Hz. That's backlash, if it's present the 
answer is to only adjust (slowly) in one direction. 

Next adjust it another 1/8 turn CCW. One would hope that the frequency goes 
from 3.2 to 2. 7 Hz. If it goes from 3.2 to 3.3 Hz, that's non-linearity. If 
it's that significant, you will need to spend some quality time doing the 
adjustment. The trick here is to do a search for one of the many possible zeros.

Next step is to move in the appropriate direction, 1/8 turn at a time, until 
you go from x.x Hz high to x.x Hz low. Once that happens, take a break. Come 
back in a half hour and check it again. 

Finally, bump the trimmer small fractions of a turn back towards zero. The idea 
is to get it closer with each bump, but not past zero. There's always some 
backlash ….

Lots of fun. All this is why cheap trimmer caps went out of favor a while back.

Bob

On May 7, 2013, at 10:24 PM, Frederick Bray <fwb...@mminternet.com> wrote:

> This might be slightly off-topic, but probably there is a time-nut who knows 
> the answer.
> 
> I am trying to adjust the 10 MHz OCXO in a Cushman 5110 service monitor.  I 
> am using a frequency counter driven by a GPSDO.  Perhaps someone can educate 
> me about a couple problems I am encountering.
> 
> I tried making small incremental adjustments but after I am done, the 
> frequency drifts several Hz and then re-stabilizes at a new value.  When I 
> make further adjustments, I notice strange behavior. For example, if I 
> initially turned the adjustment clockwise to increase the frequency, it will 
> now decrease if I turn it clockwise and increase if I turn it 
> counter-clockwise.  On the next adjustment, it will reverse again.
> 
> Is there some correct procedure to adjust an OCXO?
> 
> Many thanks for any suggestions.
> 
> Fred Bray
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