Hi Mike, The concept of "traceable to NIST" merely means you have a reference PATH back to NIST. The level of accuracy to which you claim would still need to be characterized and specified should you publish any claims as to having calibrated some piece of equipment.
The purpose of claiming traceability is to state that you have followed standardized procedures of verifying your in-house references to that of some recognized higher authority. In the United States that recognized authority is NIST. It is important to note that NIST does not "calibrate" anything in the classical sense like you would expect a local calibration facility to do. What they provide is a comparison to their standards. That is to say they will, assuming you have enough money, make a comparison of your "so-called" standard to their standard and produce a report stating a current value with an error estimate and the conditions under which such report is valid (i.e., temp, humidity, etc.). Clearly, they are only going to accept items that meet certain qualifications. While they do perform such services, mostly their work is in the research and theoretical categories as an effort to improve their standards and find ways to do such in as economical way as possible and still meet or exceed their current levels of accuracy, resolution and repeatability. One clear example is the replacement of standard voltage cells with the Josephson junction process which is easily reproducible and very repeatable. The old cells required a lot of man hours to maintain and constantly measure to achieve a mean value out of a number of such cells held at a constant temperature in an oil bath. It was a lot of number crunching to achieve 1ppm and very few labs were able to truly maintain a repeatable value below 1ppm. Another, more relevant to timenuts, is the constant improvement of frequency standards. Bill....WB6BNQ Michael Baker wrote: > Hello, Time Nutters-- > > Traceable to NIST...? All you need is this LPRO Rb osc being > disciplined by a GPSDO and you can claim NIST traceability? > > Not the way I understand the rules.... > > http://www.tenmhz.com/GPSDO.htm > > What say the list? > > Mike Baker > ---------------------- > > > Todayâs communication devices and protocols often require > > an accurate timebase. Leveraging the best technology of > > yesterday and today, we are proud to bring you the world's > > first rubidium GPSDO under $500! The LPRO-101 by Efratom® > > /Symmetricom®, stabilized by a high-sensitivity GPS system, > > provides affordable, traceable precision. Watch our DEMO > > * Features: Guaranteed Accurate to < 5x10-11, > Traceable to NIST when LED is green > > * Typical accuracy is even better â Typical Accuracy Charted > * Low phase noise 10 MHz, 50⦠BNC output at +7 dBm > * Includes power supply and high-gain GPS antenna > * Phase Locked for absolute accuracy over long time intervals > > _______________________________________________ > 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. _______________________________________________ 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.