Just thought I'd report a little on my portable Rb reference source. This has been shut down for a few years, due to a failure during some experiments. I couldn't recall what the problem was, and now I remember after running it recently. A little over a week ago, while doing some other experiments, I happened to walk past it, and decided to flip it on to see what the deal was. I kind of forgot about it, and the next day or so, I noticed the Rb lock light was on, so that part seemed OK. I quickly found that the several 10 MHz outputs - all of them - were dead, so couldn't measure any result. However, the 100 MHz, 1 GHz, and 10 GHz outs all worked, so the basic guts were OK, and the 10 MHz were out, due to some local failure. That's way better than the whole thing being crapped out. I remembered that the 100 MHz PLL is really the heart of it, referenced to the Rb's 5 MHz, and the 10 MHz is derived from the feedback divider. So, yet another project to figure out and fix.

The Rb was looking pretty good, having a day or so warm-up head start before I noticed and started looking at it. The 10 GHz shown on the HP5350 counter was about 4-5 mHz low (indicated by -5 Hz by the 1000X factor). A little gradual tweaking of the Rb brought it to all zeroes after a while. In normal mode it showed about +/- 2-3 mHz excursions peak, and in "smooth" (averaging - don't know what the routine is in this counter) it presents typical +/- one count around the all zeroes. That's my present limit of resolution, until some other projects are completed. It has been running steadily since, still looking good. I think the last time I tweaked it was probably those years ago, against the Z3801A, using the same method.

Ed
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