As a victim of the "I'm gonna build a GPSDO" virus, I think the cautions are well worth mentioning. Building a decent GPSDO sounds like such a simple thing, but it slowly turns into a rabbit hole as you discover you need ever better test equipment, and a microscope, and hot air rework station, and gaining the skills in designing the electronics and laying out boards. And then there's the time. I've got over 2 years invested in nothing but this GPSDO project. I'm retired, so I'm not talking about an hour or two after work, either.
I wouldn't discourage anyone from doing it, if they have a good idea what it's going to cost going into it; both in terms of time and money. Suddenly discovering that you really, really need a Cs standard else all the work you've done is wasted, is a big shock. I'd have to agree with others that the best path to take is to find a proven design and build it. Then decide whether you truly want to come up with something of your own. Just remember the cost. Bob -------------------------------------------- On Mon, 4/4/16, Tom Holmes <thol...@woh.rr.com> wrote: Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Advise on building a DIY GPSDO? To: "'Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement'" <time-nuts@febo.com> Date: Monday, April 4, 2016, 11:18 AM The preceding questions always come up when a newbie comes up on the list wanting to build their own GPSDO. They are all good questions from an engineering/management viewpoint, but this latest incident reminded me of conversations I had with my father some 50+ years ago when I wanted to tackle some project and needed some resources. His most common question was why do you want to do this? My usual poorly thought out answer (hey, I was an adolescent at the time) was simply "because I want to". I would then get the obligatory lecture on needing a better reason and having a plan, but then he would often provide some subset of the resources I asked for ($$) so that I could proceed. Naturally, I resented these probing interrogations into my motives and poor project management skills, but learned to accept them as the cost of doing business with the old man. Being an engineer himself, he understood that whether or not the project was a success that I would learn something from the enterpr ise. I'm not saying that the questions posed are not relevant and important, as well as useful; I just wonder if we are discouraging the learning process that most of us went through to get where we are. Tom Holmes, N8ZM _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.