Hello Time-Nuts,

I can now add a few more results from "Range 2" of the ACAM GP22 TDC chip.

As before they can be found here:  www.stanton-instruments.co.uk/page26.html

The first 2 files are more or less a repeat of what I did for "Range 1" except 
using a 250 m RG6 coax spool as delay line. In a departure from the original 
plan I left the whole length intact as one continuous piece. This gives pretty 
much 1 µs delay, a little less than predicted, and the noise band is around 1 
ns wide. I must add that it was somewhat tricky to tune the system to get this 
as the waveform out of the un-buffered line is not so nice. The output level 
from the signal generator has to be set just right for the GP22 to trigger, the 
only reliable setting is a "falling edge" and when the scope is connected at 
the same time the noise is several times worse.

So I pinned high hopes on Bob Camp's suggestion to use a 74ACT14 hex Schmitt 
trigger to buffer the line - which I did and results from which are given in 
the second pair of files.

In a nutshell, this changed very little to the "noise outcome" of 1 ns but made 
the whole affair much easier to "tune", since of course now I have clean 
waveforms. It makes little difference now whether "falling" or "rising" is 
selected in the chip's software.

The Schmitt trigger as expected increases the delay a little, so we have around 
1100 ns, and it also seems to add noise if not powered exactly in its sweet 
spot of around 5.02V. As little as 50 - 100 mV higher or lower will add several 
ns of extra noise. In some cases having the scope hooked on also added noise, 
but not as much as with the direct approach of using the coax line only. The 
74ACT shows around 20 ns between in and out (double-inverted as suggested by 
Bob) which may depend a little on Vcc and probably has some jitter of its own 
even with constant supply.

As before we have a minor frequency dependency, but less so: I have used a 
74ACT14 before and after the line, which should have given more consistent rise 
times as compared to the "raw" output from my Thandar sig-gen.

A long story cut short: With crude and noisy kit you can expect to time a 
period to within 1ns in range 2 of the GP22, assuming that the noise level does 
not increase for longer periods. And also allowing for the fact that this is 
all based on a 32kHz "master clock" on the evaluation board. Which of course 
could be done differently and with higher precision if needed.

This applies to no averaging being selected in the chip's software. If speed is 
not essential and you can wait to average 2 or even 10 cycles the whole noise 
thing goes pretty much away, which of course is pretty clear from the results 
plots.

I hazard a guess: The fact that the noise level in the "best case" scenario 
comes out the same with and without the buffers indicates to me that on the 
inputs of the GP22 are effectively similar Schmitt triggers to what I have used 
externally.

I hazard a second guess: If you hooked a very precise and stable frequency 
source as an input onto the GP22 and did it in a way that keeps the signals 
clean the claims of 50 ps "resolution/stability" could probably be achieved 
even into the µs range. The 250 m spool sitting on my floor and all the very 
crude connections don't fill me with confidence. (In the ns range I got the 50 
ps pretty much already with the crude setup as per the initial results.)

Which means for what I have in mind the chip is adequate, and what I saw 
initially (10's to 100's of ns noise) is simply the oscillator on the weighing 
cell trying to keep itself tuned with the mechanical vibrations which it is 
meant to lock on to.

Best regards,
Thomas.
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