> On Apr 22, 2016, at 1:58 AM, GandalfG8--- via time-nuts <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> Thanks. I’ve taken your suggestion for the sine-to-square converter.
> I  believe there are two separate commands for tuning the 5680 - one is “
> temporary”  and one writes through to the EEPROM. I’ll be using the latter, 
> of course.
> 
> ---------------
> I'm surprised nobody else seems to have  commented on this but I'm  pretty 
> sure that using the write to EEPROM option on an automatically  and 
> regularly repeated basis could be somewhat akin to applying the  kiss of 
> death.

I mis-typed. I meant to say that I’d be using the *former* - the temporary 
command. No writes to EEPROM. I do have code in all of my current GPSDO code 
that skips the DAC/serial write if the value isn’t changing. I did that for the 
DAC because there’s a change glitch that’s good to avoid if it’s not absolutely 
necessary.

Anyway, I’ve ordered the first set of boards. In addition to Atilla’s 
suggestion for the oscillator output conditioning (the DC-block + self-biased 
inverter), I’ve also broken out the oscillator’s PPS pin to a connector, in 
case folks might want to experimentally measure it against the GPS PPS or 
whatever other use one might desire. The physical form factor is designed to be 
the same width as the FE-5680A, with the connector spaced so that it looks like 
an extension of it. If you put, oh, 1/3” feet on the four corners of the board, 
it ought to sit flat adjacent to the oscillator and, well, I’m hoping it looks 
rather handsome. :) The connectors are the same as the crystal based GPSDOs - a 
mini-DIN-4 diagnostic connector with the same pinout, an SMA GPS antenna 
connector, 2.1mm power jack - but this one takes 16-24 VDC @ 25-30W (easily 
obtainable from a surplus laptop power supply), and two .1” JST output jacks 
that get separately buffered CMOS square wave outputs (NB3N55
 1 + 33Ω series resistor). The boards should get back early May and I’ll post 
reports to the Hackaday.io project. My results may not be very useful, as I 
don’t have a significantly better reference for comparison. My control results 
just sort of look like I’m really measuring the Thunderbolt against the 5680A 
rather than vice-versa. I suppose I could attempt to buy a second 5680A and 
square the two off against each other, but buying 5680As is fraught with 
danger, as there are significant feature and pinout differences that are not 
always properly called out in eBay auction descriptions.
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