First, be sure not to measure your HP52132A stability with the OCXO. What is your reference source?
On Mon, May 21, 2018 at 7:12 PM, Bob kb8tq <kb...@n1k.org> wrote: > Hi > > There are a lot of reasons an OCXO drifts. Temperature control is rarely the > issue. > More likely you are looking at the drift / wander characteristics of the > crystal ( and > components) in the OCXO. The simple answer is to leave it on for a while ( > like weeks) > to allow things to settle out a bit. > > The paper that Rick tossed up last week is a pretty good one in terms of > temperature > control issues in an OCXO and what the issues are. > > This all assumes you are in a fairly benign environment. If you have lots of > drafts, put a > cardboard box over the unit to shield it. If you room temperature is all over > the place, then > there are a lot of ways to get to ~ 1 or 2C sort of stability in a lab. What > you do depends > a *lot* on what your situation is. > > ===== > > So, assuming you *do* want to improve the temperature control: > > First you need to take out what’s in there now. If it’s wandering around get > rid of it. This > involves tearing apart the OCXO. > > Now take a look at Rick’s paper and redesign the thermal enclosure. Get the > heater placement > and sensor placement right and feed that into a simple controller. > > Run some tests over temperature and check out the data. It’s likely your > first guess at things > is not going to be correct. > > Try to optimize the heat sources and sensors and re-test the result. > Everything interacts so > this is not a quick process. > > Once you are reasonably happy with where things are, start looking at a more > fancy controller. > A simple approach would be feeding thermistor voltage into some 24 bit ADC’s > and then > processing the result with an MCU. > > Ok so that’s all a bit much. > > ===== > > What happens if you mess with the OCXO from the outside of the package? > > You change the heat loss out of the package. This increases the thermal gain. > ( less power > to increase the oven temperature by 1 C ). Assuming the original circuit was > balanced > out, you have made things worse rather than better. > > Ok so you do an enclosure with a fan it it so the heat loss doesn’t get less. > > You now have more heat loss and the same issue applies. In addition the fan > and it’s > nonsense probably haven’t done the poor little OCXO any good. > > When one designs a double oven, the inner oven is optimized for performance > *with* > the outer oven present. Equally, the outer oven is optimized for performance > with the > heat load (and dynamics) of the inner oven. > > ===== > > Assuming you still want to head down this road, temperature controllers are > no different > than any control loop. The first place to start is a textbook on control > loops and control > theory. The basics of what a loop does and the terminology are what you are > after. Anything > advanced will assume you understand this part first. > > Next up are temperature sensors. Simple answer here is that a glass bead > thermistor is > the way to go. For heat, transistors are the normal go-to device. The > controls loop takes > in the thermistor output and spits out a voltage to change the current > through the transistor. > > If you have the money for software licenses, the next stop is some good > mechanical CAD > that will feed into thermal modeling. From that you can work out a proper > heat flow and > gradient design. Assuming that is a bit to expensive, you are back to trial > and error. There > are no “just duplicate this” designs that I know of. > > Once you have the structure, sensors, heaters, and control you toss it into a > temperature > test chamber. That may be something fancy or something you put together. You > run the > gizmo over temperature and observe what it does. You then optimize the P,I,D > coefficients > in your control loop. Indeed you may not have all of them or you may have an > extra one. > > ======= > > Of course one could simply shop for a $20 OCXO on eBay. Even if you have to > buy a > dozen before you find a good one, it’s still cheaper / faster / easier / more > likely to succeed > than all the nonsense above. If this is a commercial design for a product you > are going > to sell, that does not work very well. The same fundamental answer applies. > If you need > better performance, shop for a better oscillator. > > > Lots of fun !!!! > > > >> On May 21, 2018, at 12:23 PM, Club-Internet Clemgill >> <clemg...@club-internet.fr> wrote: >> >> Thanks for your interesting replies. >> What I am actually trying to do is the following: >> I bough a small ocxo (size of half a ping-pong ball) that performs well >> (Abracon / AOCJY3_B 10Mhz) >> Reaching about 5*10E-11 kind of MDEV at low point ("kind of"… because a I >> use an HP52132a as input to Timelab) >> But it’s frequency is slowly drifting with time, with a quasi linear slope. >> I wondered if placing it in a third ovenized enclosure could improve things. >> I tried a few experiments but seems that the temp needs to be very >> accurately controlled. >> Any similar experience ? >> Could you suggest papers describing high performance analog or digital >> controllers ? >> Thx, >> Gilles. >> >> >>> Le 19 mai 2018 à 16:09, Bob kb8tq <kb...@n1k.org> a écrit : >>> >>> Hi >>> >>> One key point about the need for “zero gradient”: >>> >>> Crystals and many other components are quite sensitive to thermal >>> gradients. Very small >>> fractions of a degree (as a gradient ) can have significant impact on the >>> frequency of an >>> oscillator. >>> >>> One of many “interesting things” about fiddling about OCXO’s. >>> >>> The equally frustrating thing about this is that unless you can tease kind >>> paper authors >>> into posting things ( thanks Rick !!) the papers are behind pay walls. I >>> pretty much despise >>> that practice. Referencing papers that send people off to spend money ….not >>> so much. >>> >>> Bob >>> >>>> On May 19, 2018, at 12:03 AM, Richard (Rick) Karlquist >>>> <rich...@karlquist.com> wrote: >>>> >>>> In my experience, the oven temperature controller is rarely >>>> the determining factor for static oven performance. This article >>>> explains what the real determining factors are: >>>> >>>> http://www.karlquist.com/oven.pdf >>>> >>>> An analog oven temperature controller will be limited in >>>> its dynamics by how much capacitance you are able to >>>> design with. Digital controllers get around this as well >>>> as having the capability of double integration for much >>>> better transient response. >>>> >>>> Rick >>>> >>>> On 5/18/2018 11:03 AM, Gilles Clement wrote: >>>>> Hi, >>>>> I am trying to improve performance of an OCXO. >>>>> Could you point me at a good design of a high resolution oven temperature >>>>> controler please ? Preferably analog. >>>>> Thx much, >>>>> Gilles. >>>>> _______________________________________________ >>>>> 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. >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> 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. >> >> _______________________________________________ >> 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. > > _______________________________________________ > 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. _______________________________________________ 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.