To do a full and proper calibration of the HP-53131/53132/53181 counters you 
need a J06 HP-59992A time interval calibrator... lots of luck finding one of 
those.   Looking at the manual, it is actually a fairly simple device which can 
be greatly simplified for the task of calibrating a 531XX counter.

The main task is to generate 10 MHz square waves with 50% duty cycle.  Four 
versions of the signal are generated (two positive and two with inverted 
phase).  One of four combos of these signals (P1-P2,  P2-P1,  N1-N2, and N2-N1) 
are driven to two output connectors.   The 59992A uses splitters and phase 
shifters to generate the signals and can handle analog signals.  The 531xx cal 
uses square waves so those signals can be generated digitally.   

My first idea is to take a 20 MHz oscillator and divide it by two to get a 50% 
duty cycle. One could also do something like squaring a 10 MHz osc with 
something like the Wenzel squarer... that would provide a more stable signal 
frequency wise but that might add some asymmetries to the signal.  Feeding the 
10 Mhz osc through a doubler and dividing the squared signal might provide the 
best solution.

The 531xx cal procedure uses a +/- 0.50V signal.   I need a simple and cheap 
circuit to level shift the TTL signal to +/- 0.50V  It probably needs clean, 
stable, fast edges and able to drive a 50 ohm load (the manuals don't specify 
the required edge rates and load).   Any ideas for a suitable level shifter / 
buffer?  It would also be super nice if it could work from a single supply...

Also,  if such a cal board was laid out would there be any interest in making 
it available for others to build?  
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