Yes, it's like anything else - different models, different sellers,
tested or not, different ideas on the value of the box. I've seen
prices for DTS models from about $600 and up, although there's a 'U.S.
only' lower-end unit selling for $300 that looks like it's working . By
the way, these things are big and heavy so shipping to the UK would be
ugly. It seems like most of them are in the U.S.
Ed
On 9/10/2013 6:57 AM, paul swed wrote:
I looked them up on the payme site and $3500. I wasn't sure what they
actually were until that point. Actually seem great for time-nuts to
measure drift.
Sucks lots O power, has lots O weight, generates heat. Nothing better.
Regards
Paul
WB8TSL
On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 3:52 AM, David C. Partridge <
[email protected]> wrote:
Wow, where do I get one and how spendy are they?
Cheers
David Partridge
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Ed Palmer
Sent: 10 September 2013 05:34
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
Subject: [time-nuts] DTS-2077 Very Cool Toy!
I fed a 1 GHz sine wave @ 0 dBm into the DTS-2077. I told the DTS to
sample
the voltage every 10 ps and dump the data to a file. The attached graph
shows the result. The horizontal axis is samples (i.e.
increments of 10 ps). The vertical axis is units of 100 uv. I've got a
digital scope with a sampling rate of 100 GS/s! Very cool!
Ed
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