my 2 cents:

1) hack a RC delay + comparator (isolate well the R and C for temp variations)
2) use a proper delay line (can be bought at digikey/mouser/etc)

Daniel

Em 24/11/2015 12:04, Thomas Allgeier escreveu:
Hello,



I have an ACAM GP22 TDC chip and evaluation board which I am looking at for 
“work” purposes – I work for a company active in the weighing and force 
measurement world.



I should say from the start that I am new to time and frequency measurements 
and not even an electronics engineer – but then I have been exposed to 
high-precision electronics for the last 25 years hence have picked up some 
dangerous degree of half-knowledge.



We want to use this chip to measure the period of a square wave, of around 13 
kHz i.e. in the 70 µs range. As the application is potentially high-accuracy we 
need to know the period to within 1 ns or better.



In order to evaluate the chip I was planning to replicate John A’s experiment 
with the coaxial delay line from the HP5370b – but as my interest is in 
“measuring range 2” of the GP22 I need a delay of 500 ns or more (actually 1 µs 
sounds a better start). This is the equivalent of a 200 m length of cable. I 
fear trouble with this: Am I not getting unwanted inductivities if I use a coil 
of that size?



So, to come to the point: Am I pushing the concept of a coax delay too far with 
1 µs and are there other (simple/reliable) ways to achieve this kind of delay? 
I have tried it with a shorter piece of cable (around 2 ns which is measured in 
“range 1”), there I seem to get consistency virtually to within 100 ps. But I 
need to know if the device sticks to this level of performance when the periods 
are much longer, and thus measured in “range 2”.



Thanks and best regards,

Thomas.
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