Eric Fort wrote: > I'm looking for a fairly basic, relatively simple 10 Mhz PORTABLE > reference (probably quartz based) with enough stability over a period > of a week of outdoor temp extremes to keep a 47Ghz transmitter locked > within 100hz while mountaintop contesting. Suggestions are > appreciated. something that is small and ran off 12 volts dc (car > battery) would be a definite plus. > > Thanks, > > Eric > 100 Hz accuracy at 47 GHz is a nice goal but probably hardly necessary in practice.
What needs to be sought to make contacts on upper microwave frequencies is minimizing ALL the uncertainties. The main thing most hams short-cut is aiming accuracy. You really need an accurate aiming degree gauge and a way to calibrate it to your current operating position. Here in sunny California I usually use the sun shadow on my dish, some software on my Palm handheld, and a setting of the time on the Palm to a second or two to do the aiming calibration of my tripod. If the sun is not clearly available, beacons can be used with great accuracy if available. A compass can help too, but I think that it is the hardest to get accurate. Knowing up and down angles vs horizontal is helpful too. For frequency I have used a decent crystal OCXO for some years on 10 GHz. I'm sure it would be fine on 24 GHz or even higher. I just recently made my first contact on 47 GHz with a good, but much less accurate, reference. I have a friend who has taken out a very nice 10/24 GHz rig with his frequency based on a rubidium source. We shared an operation spot one day and while talking with him I said I thought that I couldn't justify a rubidium vs. my simple decent OCXO for two days of operation. There's the battery current consumption and any good xtal's drift over this relatively short period is probably too small to really matter in finding the average station and making the contact. He agreed. If you are going for the record contact that cannot even be heard with the naked ear, then, yes, it may be helpful to have the resolution provided by an atomic source or GPS enhanced receiver. A good xtal-based source seems to be the way to go for phase noise if that is important and for ham activities that is important. My thought was to own a decent GPS disciplined source based on a good xtal source. My search obtained a Z3816A that I picked up a few years ago. That is my main local reference. I also have a few rubidium sources that I have picked up but haven't yet accurately synced all of them to my best reference. As the time-nuts list influences me, I'll do more to get all my sources close to my best reference and then maybe do more to see how they compare, but for my ham activities over a weekend, a good OCXO that has been set accurately is quite adequate. The time-nuts list is a great place to learn about all sorts of stuff including test equipment. I intend to hang around and learn, even if I never push the envelope nearly as far as many here are focused on. _______________________________________________ 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.