Luciano wrote:
I didn't write that any instrument needs a reference signal of more than +13dBm (= 1Vrms) as you write, but a DA must be able to handle the signal levels of the standard on the market.
If a standard puts out more than +13dBm, it can be padded down to that level. There is no need to distribute the signal at the (higher) source level unless a client instruments need it (and to my knowledge, none does).
Unfortunately,even in this case what you say does not conform to reality. I am attaching to this mail a comparison I made by taking from the web some characteristics about DA on the market or prototypes built by people far more expert than me. As you will also see, what we can consider top, made by NIST, has the same harmonic distortion of mine. With rare exceptions that should be evaluated more carefully, harmonic distortion is about 30dBc.
DAs have traditionally had distortion specs in the -40 dBc range, and probably for historical reasons many current DA designs still have similar levels of distortion. That does not mean this is the best that can be done, and now that we understand that distortion that high compromises the phase noise performance of client instruments, there is no reason to tolerate it if we can do better. And we can. Much better.
To get as you claim 65dBc, you must insert an output band pass filter or a low pass/notch filter
Not true.
if you have found the web a DA admittedly broad band with features you write (-65dBc) can you give us the link?
I do not look for DAs on the web. I design my own. Best regards, Charles _______________________________________________ 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.
