Hi Adrian,

> The dead zone random jumps can not be unwrapped by any software

Correct, the dead zones are real. But it is *not* true that the jumps cannot be 
unwrapped by any software. Let me explain...

When I collect data from an instrument, from thermometer to TIC, over RS-232 or 
GPIB or USB or LAN, I log the data to a file and prefix every line with a 9 
decimal place MJD timestamp. This not only allows me to know when 
(historically) the data was collected, but by subtracting timestamp pairs, it 
also tells me how long each measurement took.

For frequency measurements, this allows you to determine counter dead time. For 
time interval measurements, this allows you to immediately detect when the 
counter goes into the dreaded too-close-to-zero sample skip mode. That is, when 
start/stop acts more like stop/start resulting in one reading every 2 seconds 
instead of every 1 second.

Right, it is impossible to retroactively re-measure the lost samples -- but by 
knowing when the sample rate is 1 sps vs. 2 sps you can reconstruct a valid 
phase data stream with constant tau, even with simple 2 sample interpolation. 
The result is that this repaired/fixed data is then perfectly usable for phase 
and frequency strip charts, as well as ADEV plots, and even FFT. Without this 
fix, all these plots can behave very badly because the universal assumption of 
some fixed tau0 has been violated.

The PC MJD (or equiv) timestamp does not need to be absolutely accurate. That 
is, you don't need NTP or anything like that. Just 0.1 or 0.01 second 
resolution is all you need. So this works on any microcontroller, or computer 
running any operating system, with or without internet connection.

If you don't like MJD, even something like the old unix clock() function is 
enough to disambiguate 2 sps from 1 sps. But the key point is never just 
blindly log plain serial data and then cry later. Always time-stamp or 
time-interval it as it is being read and written to a log file.

/tvb

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Adrian" <[email protected]>
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, October 09, 2016 9:34 AM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] TimeLab


Hi Magnus,

unfortunately, you can't measure 0 delay between two signals with a counter.
With a 53131A, there is 500ps of LSB jitter and jitter from the measured
signal as well as from the reference signal.
When both signals are exactly in phase, the counter will randomly jump
between 0 and 1 second (assuming you are measuring 1pps signals).
In order to avoid this dead zone, you must add a sufficiently large
phase offset between both signals.
And, keep the acquisition time small enough to avoid phase wraps due to
drift between both sources.
The dead zone random jumps can not be unwrapped by any software.

Cheers,
Adrian

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