Hi Hal,

This behavior is called hysteresis and it is related to vendors, and related to 
the chips used (or varactor diode) inside the tcxo/ocxo. It is so subtle that 
most vendors are not even aware that their oscillator is doing it. Some vendors 
have product lines that do it and others that don't. We have spent a lot of 
energy and time locating vendors and products that don't do it, but we still 
test for it. You can only see it when you discipline the crystal and can 
measure phase drift over 10's of minutes as the frequency shifts will typically 
be below the noise floor and masked by thermal stability of the tcxo.

For example if a crystal has 50 parts per trillion hysteresis (5E-011) this 
means the phase will drift back and forth at up to 0.05ns per second which 
means the equivalent of less than 50ns every 16 minutes or so. Depending on how 
fast the loop goes back and forth around this 50ppb dead zone the crystal could 
phase drift back and forth some 10's of nanoseconds. That makes a big 
difference in ADEV and standard deviation. The solution: identify vendors and 
products that don't do it.. This is part of the art.

Bye,
Said





Sent From iPhone

> On Oct 21, 2014, at 0:12, Hal Murray <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> [email protected] said:
>> The problem is that the ocxo maintains its frequency even though the EFC
>> control voltage is changing. Thus phase error is accruing making the efc
>> larger and larger due to the P term.
> 
>> Then at some point the crystal 'snaps'  and jumps in frequency, overshooting
>> the desired frequency and causing the P term to start pushing in the
>> opposite direction repeating the cycle.
> 
> Does anybody understand the mechanism behind that behavior?
> 
> 
> -- 
> These are my opinions.  I hate spam.
> 
> 
> 
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