I’ve designed and make and sell a GPSDO on Tindie 
(https://hackaday.io/project/6872-gps-disciplined-tcxo). It’s brand new - I’ve 
sold a handful of them so far. So as to make this post not *entirely* 
self-serving, what I would like is some further guidance on how I can better 
characterize its performance.

The GPS reference is a 1 pps signal (It’s the Adafruit Ultimate GPS module - a 
PA6H). The manufacturer claims an accuracy of ±10 ns, but that's accuracy 
relative to the true start of the GPS second. They don’t make any claim for 
stability.

The oscillator itself (Connor Winfield DOT050V 10 MHz) has a short-term (though 
they don’t say how short that term is) stability of 1 ppb. The absolute 
accuracy of it is (I assume) irrelevant, because it’s a VCTCXO and the control 
voltage is steered by GPS feedback.

The feedback loop takes samples over a 100 second period. That gives me an 
error sample with a granularity of 1 ppb. I keep a rolling sample window of 10 
samples to get an error count over 1000 seconds. I've kept track of both of 
these values for extended periods (days) as well as logging the DAC value (the 
number that's proportional to the control voltage). The 1000 second sample 
window error averages zero, and it almost never exceeds ±7 (every once in a 
while if I physically move it, it will show a momentary error glitch, but that 
shows up in the short term feedback sampling too). The 100 second samples are 
almost all 0 or ±1, with an occasional ±2 showing up. As I said before, if I 
bonk the oscillator, it may briefly show a ±6 or so for one sample.

If I pit two of them against each other on a scope and take a time lapse video 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9HkeCI90i44), you can see that they stay mostly 
locked with occasional periods of drift. I sort of assume that that represents 
periods where the two GPS receivers disagree as they decide differently how to 
select among the available satellites.

I've been saying out loud that the oscillator is ±1 ppb from GPS over the 1000 
second window. I know of Allan variance, but I don't have anything else handy I 
can use for comparison. I also can't really afford to send one off for testing 
to a proper lab. In looking at http://tf.nist.gov/general/pdf/2297.pdf, it 
suggests that my results are relatively poor compared to what a GPSDO can 
achieve (more like 10^-12 rather than 10^-9), but I assume that they’re able to 
use a higher frequency GPS reference than just 1 PPS (and they’re a lot 
pricier).

What else can I do to try and characterize the performance? If mine is 
performing far more poorly than the same price ($175) can buy elsewhere, then 
what am I doing wrong?

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