David,

I I told yesterday it was too late for writing an explanation.  Here it is.

I bought one of these units around last June, my intended use was to distribute the 10 MHz from my Rb oscillator to be used as the reference for various synthesizers and counters in my home lab. I didn't put it to use yet, but I made some test with the gadget and this is what I found:

- The power supply should be some 15V, not 12 as announced. There is a 3 pin 12 volt linear regulator7812CT which needs some overhead to work, and a DC-DC converter to generate +5V which is specified at 15V input and in fact it doesn't work well below it.

- The 10 MHz oscillator is a EFRATOM 105243-003 and there is a jumper for selecting this oscillator or an external 10 MHz input. The circuit has a 8.7 V regulator built with a 431 programmable zener with an opamp and a multiturn pot which is accessible from outside for adjusting the oscillator frequency. There is also a hole in the oscillator for adjusting the frequency.

- The oscillator output is squared with an unknown comparator and fed to the inputs of what seems to be a 74ACT244DW which 8 outputs drive the output connectors through coupling networks. The PCB has provisions for 8 SMA output connectors, with only 4 populated. I bought a bunch of identical connectors from other supplier and I'll install them when I'll put the unit into operation, I'll only have to drill 4 holes for them in the case and solder the output networks, nothing critical.

- Currently the unit has 2 output networks configured for square wave output (just a 50 ohm resistor in series) and the 2 remaining for sine wave output. In this case the network consist on a 50 Ohm series resistor, a pi LC filter a and a series capacitor. According to the silkscreen labels it was the manufacturer intended configuration. It is easy to transform any output for square or sine because the parts are smd but of reasonable size.

- I don't have the means to measure the jitter or phase noise introduced by this schema, but any expert here could give his opinion about it. The ovenized oscillator on my unit doesn't perform very well in terms of aging or time to stabilize, it is worse that my other oscillators ( ) from the same source, I compared them with my Rb and maybe I didn't waited enough days, but anyway the others 2 were very stable after 1 week and this one not.

-. I don't know the exact parts used for the comparator and the buffer because the tops have been filed. When I reverse engineered the schematic I offered it to fluke.l, in the believe that it could be useful for his customers but his answer suggested that he had filed the IDs in the fear of other Chinese competition could copy his modifications and refused to give me the parts numbers.

If you want more info don't hesitate to ask for it.

Regards,
Ignacio, EB4APL



El 12/02/2011 22:03, Dave M wrote:
Does anyone have any experience or knowledge of the "Efratom Multiplexed
output 10Mhz frequency standard" from Fluke.l on EBay (item 290329156915)?
I wonder if it could be used as a distribution amp, but no details about
output impedance, output current capability, etc.  He indicates that the
output voltage is 1.8 - 2.3 volts (doesn't say if it's open circuit or
terminated).  From the images on the listing, looks like he didn't terminate
any of the lines to the counters or scopes.

Thanks
David
dgminala at mediacombb dot net
_______________________________________________
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.

Reply via email to