Hi Well part of it comes from designing, testing, and manufacturing a few thousand OCXO designs over the years. We likely built 10’s of millions of OCXO’s over the time I was doing / managing that.
> On Jul 11, 2019, at 3:56 AM, Leo Bodnar <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hello, / > > Why would you not want high drive level for best close-in noise? This is at > odds with general thinking in the industry. > Close-in in this context means from 0.1Hz to 1/f knee which is 1-100kHz > depending on the design of the sustaining amplifier. > > There are few reasons why low phase noise "practical" oscillators are built > as OCXOs: > > On one hand: > - close-in noise depends on 1/f knee frequency That is a quick approximation. There always will be a bit more to it. > - lowering knee frequency requires high-Q resonators That does help, but it’s far from the whole story > - for classic 1MHz..100MHz range this means crystals There are other exotic things you could do. Cost wise they get a bit crazy. There are materials other than quartz that give you higher Q. In some cases *much* higher Q without a massive cost penalty. > - high-Q crystals require SC-cut Actually not so much. An SC has a lower Q than an AT of similar size and design up to the point acoustic Q losses completely take over. If you are talking about sub 20 MHz OCXO’s with “doable” crystal package sizes, the AT will have the higher Q by a significant margin. > > On the other hand: > - phase noise density is measured as a ratio referred to carrier level True, that’s how it’s defined > - increasing carrier level improves phase noise figure Which is often how you get good phase noise far removed, since your circuit does not have issues as you increase the drive level. (if properly designed) > - increasing carrier level necessitates increasing drive level To the degree that “carrier level” in this case is defined to be exactly the same as drive level. > - maintaining reasonable ageing rate at higher drive levels requires SC-cut > crystals Not so much. Indeed there are a number of cuts that do well. The SC’s claim to fame is immunity to acceleration / stress effects in a single plane. (SC = Stress Compensated ). A side effect of the design is a shallow turn point at higher temperatures. There are other cuts that share this characteristic. Things like the FC do get used in OCXO’s. > > Having established that SC-cut is preferred: > - SC-cut has high temperature turning point. Its room temperature tempco is > much worse than AT-cut's one making it mostly unusable as XO or TCXO Depends on the XO, They get built into down hole gear as an XO. There are other “un heated” SC based applications. > - High temperature turning point requires oven Depending on the application and temperature spec. There *are* indeed low phase noise / SC based room temperature oscillators sold for some “interesting” applications. There’s a list member who has posted about their experience doing so. ======== The bigger problem is that your approximation that drive always improves phase noise falls apart as you get closer to carrier. There are a lot of things that drive this. If they didn’t, the design task would simply be to have a low noise follower amp. There have been designs published in a lot of places for amps that are 50 db better than the noise of any OCXO at 1 Hz offset. Bob > > Leo > >>> From: Bob kb8tq <[email protected]> >> It depends a lot on the offset you are looking at. For close in phase noise, >> you probably don’t >> want high drive. If you are only after phase noise past 10KHz, you may not >> want / need >> an OCXO in the first place. Selecting crystals (like one in a hundred) for >> very high drive / >> low phase noise setups *is* done. It’s just not very practical. >> >>> On Jul 10, 2019, at 3:49 AM, Leo Bodnar <leo at leobodnar.com> wrote: >>> It depends whether OCXO is designed for long term stability and low ageing >>> or low phase noise. >>> Low ageing requires low drive but low phase noise needs as much drive as >>> humanely possible - often approaching mW levels. > > _______________________________________________ > time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] > To unsubscribe, go to > http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com > and follow the instructions there. _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com and follow the instructions there.
