In a dual mixer system isolation is more critical to avoid locking between the 2 sources being compared.

Isolation amplifiers with 80dB or more reverse isolation and low phase noise are inexpensive requiring 3 or 4 transistors (depending on the desired isolation) if you build your own.

One can replace the counter with an inexpensive FPGA and eliminate the picket fence source.

Bruce

Bob Camp wrote:
Hi

Here's my heterodyne vs tight loop logic:

1) With a heterodyne at around 8 Hz your isolation amplifiers are not as 
critical. Injection locking is a lot less likely at 8 Hz than dead on frequency.
2) You eliminate the need for any form of phase lock.
3) You do need a mixer and a couple of OP-27/37's.
4) Resistors, capacitors, power supplies are likely the same between the two.
5) For time tagging you'll need a picket fence source - not much money there. 
You could also decide not to time tag.


So far the Hetrodyne is as cheap as the tight lock. Probably a bit cheaper. 
Most of the parts are the same between the two setups, they simply get wired 
differently.

The only real question is weather your DVM or my junk counter cost more money. My counter 
can be pretty bad and still not "get in the way".  My old (and long gone)  
Beckman EPUT meter could probably handle the task. Tough to get data out of a vacuum tube 
counter though.

Most 10811's are not 1x10^-13 at 1 second. A few might be. The vast majority 
are up around 0.8 to 2x10^-12 at one second. They were only specified to make 
5x10^-12 at one second. Both systems are equally limited by the performance of 
the reference oscillator.

Bob


On Feb 6, 2010, at 5:42 PM, WarrenS wrote:

Bob

So, if your point is that there are other ways to do it.  ...We Agree
(And the reason for the advanced methods is so that the counter resolution is 
not the limiting factor)

Or are you saying a Tight Phase-Lock Loop" is not the simplest and cheapest way 
to get 1e13 resolution at 1  sec?
That I'd have to see something new to believe it.

Just so things do not get too far off the original topic, here is a reminder:
"I would appreciate any comments or observations on the SIMPLEST scheme for making 
stability measurements at 1e-13 in one sec."
ws Answer)  Try the "Tight Phase-Lock Loop Method"

May want to compare the blocks and equipment needed for A straight heterodyne system, or 
a DMTD, compared to the Analog "Tight Phase-Lock Loop" Method,  AND then see 
what added problems there are because of injection locking, Osc coupling, Phase noise, 
ETC, ETC.


ws

***************

----- Original Message ----- From: "Bob Camp"<li...@cq.nu>
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"<time-nuts@febo.com>
Sent: Saturday, February 06, 2010 2:03 PM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] ADEV vs MDEV


Hi

A straight heterodyne system will get you to the floor of most 10811's with a 
very simple (2 stage) limiter.
As with the DMTD, the counter requirements aren't really all that severe.

Bob
*********************

On Feb 6, 2010, at 4:24 PM, WarrenS wrote:

"It's possible / likely for injection lock ... to be a problem ..."
Something I certainly worried about and tested for.
What I found (for MY case) is that injection lock is NOT a problem.
The reason being is that unlike most other ways, where the two OSC have to be 
completely independent,
The tight loop approach forces the Two Osc to "Lock with something like 60 + db 
gain,
so a little stray -80db injection lock coupling that would very much limit 
other systems has
no measurable effect at e-13. Just one of the neat little side effects that 
make the tight loop approach so simple.

"then a part in 10^14 is going to be at the 100 of nanovolts level."
For that example, just need to put a simple discrete 100 to 1 resistor divider
in-between the control voltage and the EFC and now you have a nice workable 
10uv.
BUT the bigger point is, probable not needed, cause you are NOT going to do any 
better than the stability of the OSC with a grounded shorted EFC input.

as you said and I agree is so true:
"There is no perfect way to do any of this, only a lot of compromises ... you need 
to watch out for".
But you did not offer any easier way to do it, which is what the original 
request was for and my answer addressed.
This is the cheapest easiest way BY FAR to get high performance, at low tau, 
ADEV numbers that I've seen.

ws
***************

----- Original Message ----- From: "Bob Camp"<li...@cq.nu>
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"<time-nuts@febo.com>
Sent: Saturday, February 06, 2010 12:09 PM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] ADEV vs MDEV


Hi

It's possible / likely to injection lock with the tight loop approach and get 
data that's much better than reality. A lot depends on the specific oscillators 
under test and the buffers (if any) between the oscillators and mixer.

If your OCVCXO has a tuning slope of 0.1 ppm / volt then a part in 10^14 is 
going to be at the 100 of nanovolts level. Certainly not impossible, but it 
does present it's own set of issues. Lab gear to do it is available, but not 
all that common. DC offsets and their temperature coefficients along with 
thermocouple effects could make things exciting.

There is no perfect way to do any of this, only a lot of compromises here or 
there. Each approach has stuff you need to watch out for.

Bob

--------------------------------------------------
From: "WarrenS"<warrensjmail-...@yahoo.com>
Sent: Saturday, February 06, 2010 2:19 PM
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"<time-nuts@febo.com>
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] ADEV vs MDEV

Peat said:
I would appreciate any comments or observations on the topic of apparatus with 
demonstrated stability measurements.
My motivation is to discover the SIMPLEST scheme for making stability 
measurements at the 1E-13 in 1s  performance level.

If you accept that the measurement is going to limited by the Reference Osc,
for Low COST and SIMPLE, with the ability to measure ADEVs at that level,
Can't beat a simple analog version of  NIST's "Tight Phase-Lock Loop Method of 
measuring Freq stability".
http://tf.nist.gov/phase/Properties/one.htm#oneone    Fig 1.7


By replacing the "Voltage to freq converter, Freq counter&  Printer with a 
Radio shack type PC data logging DVM,
It can be up and running from scratch in under an Hr, with no high end test 
equipment needed.
If you want performance that exceeds the best of most DMTD at low Tau it takes 
a little more work
and a higher speed oversampling ADC data logger and a good offset voltage.

I must add this is not a popular solution (Or a general Purpose one) but
IF  you know analog and have a GOOD osc with EFC to use for the reference,
as far as I've been able to determine it is the BEST SIMPLE answer that allows 
High performance.
Limited by My HP10811 Ref OSC, I'm getting better than 1e-12 in 0.1 sec (at 30 
Hz Bandwidth)

Basic modified NIST Block Diag attached:
The NIST paper sums it up quite nicely:
'It is not difficult to achieve a sensitivity of a part in e14 per Hz resolution
so one has excellent precision capabilities with this system.'

This does not address your other question of ADEV vs MDEV,
What I've described is just a simple way to get the Low cost, GOOD Raw data.
What you then do with that Data is a different subject.

You can run the raw data thru one of the many ADEV programs out there, 
'Plotter' being my choice.


Have fun
ws

*************

[time-nuts] ADEV vs MDEV
Pete Rawson peterawson at earthlink.net
Sat Feb 6 03:59:18 UTC 2010

Efforts are underway to develop a low cost DMTD apparatus with
demonstrated stability measurements of 1E-13 in 1s. It seems that
existing TI counters can reach this goal in 10s. (using MDEV estimate
or 100+s. using ADEV estimate). The question is; does the MDEV tool
provide an appropriate measure of stability in this time range, or is
the ADEV estimate a more correct answer?

The TI performance I'm referring to is the 20-25 ps, single shot TI,
typical for theHP5370A/B, the SR620 or the CNT81/91. I have data
from my CNT81showing MDEV<  1E-13 in 10s. and I believe the
other counters behave similarly.

I would appreciate any comments or observations on this topic.
My motivation is to discover the simplest scheme for making
stability measurements at this performance level; this is NOT
even close to the state-of-the-art, but can still be useful.

Pete Rawson




_______________________________________________
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.

Reply via email to