> -----Original Message-----
> From: time-nuts [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
> Gerhard Hoffmann
> Sent: Saturday, October 17, 2020 5:59 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [time-nuts] Fwd: cheap frequency extension for timepod
> . . .
> I have 2 17 dBm SRA1-WH, but it would require slaughtering something
> unimportant.

I prefer using high-level mixers because a level-7 mixer will be hopelessly 
crunched by most signal sources.  Note that a "+7 dBm" or  "level 7" mixer is 
meant to work with +7 dBm at the LO port, not the RF port.  For quadrature 
phase detection it's common to saturate both ports, but in this case the mixers 
are being used as actual mixers rather than phase detectors.  You will get 
better port isolation and conversion loss if you stay within shouting distance 
of the datasheet specs.  

I got a good deal on a bunch of connectorized ZFM-2H mixers on eBay a while 
back, and they've come in handy many times.   The rated 1-dB compression point 
with the ZFM-2H is +14 dBm with a +17 dBm LO, while SRA-1 is rated +1 dBm with 
a +7 dBm LO.  The extra +10 dB of LO injection buys a disproportionate 
performance improvement.  

In principle, I/Q mixers have an advantage in that they can be set up to reject 
noise at the image frequency.  This is worth thinking about for low-noise 
measurements, because you're going to be driving the two mixers at Ch0 and Ch2 
with a signal from a splitter that will exhibit both common- and 
differential-mode noise over the whole spectrum of interest.  Those are 
conditions under which weird cross-spectral artifacts tend to show up.

Right now I'm working on an app note for downconversion measurements on the 
53100A that will explore all of these questions to some extent, but there's 
nothing concrete to share just yet.  As a sneak preview, though, the app note 
will emphasize the importance of (broadband!) isolation and termination of all 
mixer and splitter ports in measurements with independent downconverter 
channels.  Because Wilkinson-style splitters work best at frequencies where 
their input ports are properly terminated, a splitter with degraded isolation 
due to input mismatch may end up coupling the two LOs to each other through 
their respective mixer RF ports.

Given the compact hardware layout in your photo, I'm concerned that good 
isolation may be tough to achieve.  The two oscillators may even try to 
injection-lock to each other.  Not necessarily a showstopper as long as the 
lock bandwidth is low enough, but if that aspect of operation is out of your 
control, it's not a Good Thing.  Empirically, I've found it best to run the LOs 
at a frequency separation less than 10% of the minimum offset of interest.  
This isn't a concern on the 53100A, but the TimePod has only one DDS core for 
both of its input channels.

-- john 



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