Didier Juges wrote:
I like the 3586 a lot, it's amazing what you can do with it. However, if you 
send the audio (beat note) to a computer or other instrument, keep in mind that 
the BFOs are not phase locked to the reference, they are just free standing 
crystal oscillators, and they may be off by a few Hz. If you want to use the 
beat note for high accuracy frequency measurement, it would be a good idea to 
phase lock the BFOs to the reference (at least the one you are going to use, 
you don't need to do both).

The carrier frequency measurement system is independant of the BFOs.

I've measured the BFO frequency in my 3586Cs and while the absolute frequencies are off by a Hertz or two (and USB and LSB come from separate crystals), they are remarkably stable once the receiver is warmed up. They're derived from an ~1.9 MHz crystal that's divided by a large number (IIRC 1000) so any crystal drift is reduced significantly.

Therefore, you don't want to derive frequency directly from the audio output tone, but for relative measurements the BFO is stable enough for any off-air measurement. And as Didier notes, the BFO isn't in the frequency counter path, so doesn't create an error there.

John

_______________________________________________
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