Alex, Now it's time to share some of my favorite vintage time & frequency links.
Some very nice vintage low frequency quartz crystals (20 kHz down to 5 kHz): http://www.cdvandt.org/luminous_quartz.htm Lothar Rohde's revolutionary "portable" quartz-clock type: CFQ http://www.cdvandt.org/CFQ.pdf http://www.cdvandt.org/cfq.htm Quartz-clock designed by the “PTR”, Germany’s Bureau of Standard, in the 1920s and 1930s http://www.cdvandt.org/PTR%20quartz-clock.pdf http://www.cdvandt.org/ptr_quartz-clock.htm A British technical report on German Quartz Clocks: http://www.cdvandt.org/BIOS-1316.pdf The above ~10 page PDF is a must-read for any of you interested in the early history of quartz timekeeping. Note one of the authors was Louis Essen, who went on to develop the first cesium clock, the guy behind the 9192631770 Hz cesium definition of the second, and one of the first to propose leap seconds. I have more Essen info here: http://leapsecond.com/history For that matter, if you have time, the entire German History of Technology web site is fascinating: http://www.cdvandt.org/ /tvb ----- Original Message ----- From: "Alex Pummer" <[email protected]> To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" <[email protected]> Sent: Friday, January 09, 2015 3:27 PM Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Mechanical 1PPS Oscillator Disciplining yes, Ulrich's [ Rohde ] Father made a high precision clock around 1940, which had an electronically tuned mechanical oscillator. The vibrating 400Hz tuning fork is phase locked to a quartz crystal oscillator, that was the most precise clock at that time, and it worked as I have seen it at the company as I worked there in the sixties of the past century. 73 KJ6UHN Alex _______________________________________________ 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.
