On 03/10/2012 04:44 PM, Mark Spencer wrote:
I've done this as well.

I daisy chained several pieces of hp and marconi gear together that all had an 
approx 1k ohm input impedance for the frequency reference and fed them from a 
single 10 Mhz source via t connectors with a 50 ohm terminator at the end of 
the line.   Looking at the signal with either a scope or a time interval 
counter I have seen noticeable phase shifts when some of the equipment 
receiving this signal is turned off or on.   That being said so long as the 
equipment was not turned off or on the adev of the signal was as expected.   
Your mileage may vary.

Sent from my iPad

On 2012-03-10, at 4:24 PM, Michael Blazer<mbla...@satx.rr.com>  wrote:

You may want to take a look at the signal on a scope.  Most instruments 
terminate their reference input.  You might actually have 4 50 ohm loads on the 
Thunderbolt's output and the input voltage might be marginal.  If your 
instruments have both reference input and output, it's better to daisy chain 
the units.


On 3/10/2012 5:10 PM, Chuck Forsberg WA7KGX N2469R wrote:
A month or two ago I had sketched out a simple distribution amp
for my 10 MHz reference.   In the meantime I became somewhat
disillusioned about my FE-5680a standards.   So I removed the
FE-5680a and disconnected its power supply from the box that
holds the Thunderbolt, power supply, and big line filter.

I decided to try daisy-chaining the Thunderbolt's 10 MHz output.
I have plenty of hardware left over from the days of 10BaseT networking.

So I have the Thunderbolt going to a BNC T on the back of my FlexRadio 1500,
hence to my Advantest U3641 spectrum analyzer, and finally to the external
reference on my Racal-Dana 1992 nanosecond universal counter.  That end
has a 50 ohm termination on the other side of its T connector.

All three devices seem happy with the 10 MHz they are receiving.

I connected my Tek 2712 to the end of the chain.  It reads +10dbm +-1db.

Switching units on/off/ext ref causes less than 1db change in the 10 MHz.


--
Chuck Forsberg WA7KGX N2469R     c...@omen.com   www.omen.com
Developer of Industrial ZMODEM(Tm) for Embedded Applications
  Omen Technology Inc      "The High Reliability Software"
10255 NW Old Cornelius Pass Portland OR 97231   503-614-0430


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