Bob...

Interesting point about the heater not working vs the XTAL having drifted too 
far. Mine has the same symptoms as the others reported (EFC at the end of its 
rope) but have not tackled it yet, figuring I'd have to dismantle the whole 
thing. Certainly troubleshooting a non-operating heater would be much more 
pleasant.

Thanks for that insight.

Tom Holmes, N8ZM

-----Original Message-----
From: time-nuts <time-nuts-boun...@febo.com> On Behalf Of Bob kb8tq
Sent: Saturday, March 03, 2018 2:07 PM
To: Tom Curlee <tcur...@sbcglobal.net>; Discussion of precise time and 
frequency measurement <time-nuts@febo.com>
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Z3801A OCXO manual trimming

Hi

First off some basics about OCXO’s.

In a single oven design, you have a heater that warms up the entire crystal and 
the guts of the oscillator. It is on all the time and 
it gets things up to a temperature that makes sense for a given crystal. It can 
be adjusted based on manufacturing data or by 
trial and error to match the characteristics of that crystal. 

In a double oven design, you have two ovens that are on all the time. One heats 
up the other one. They both work together to
achieve the end result. The gain of one adds to the gain of the other to give 
an improved result. On some double ovens, the 
entire heat range of the inner oven is only 10’s of degrees ….

In a boosted oven, you have a second heater to get things going when it is very 
cold. This is an unusual approach and rarely 
seen. Its normally easier to just design a bit more power into the main oven 
circuit. In a boosted design, the boost heat goes
away in normal operation at typical temperatures. In normal operation, the gain 
of the boost circuit does not count. 

SO ….

The oscillator in the Z3801 is a boosted 10811. It is boosted to allow them to 
hit a spec of -40C on the unit. At the time it was
designed, there was talk about mounting these things in un-heated boxes 
outdoors. After they got a bit further into all the 
details of the designs … that part went away. The spec still hung around long 
enough to apply to very early designs. 

The net result is that you can pretty much destroy the outer heater stuff and 
the oscillator will work fine. There is no need 
for it in a typical lab. There are some alarm triggers that need to be wired 
“ok” when you do so. The details are in the archives. 

But …

Best guess if your unit is at max EFC = the “real” heater on the 10811 has quit 
working. To get at that, you will need to dig 
into the guts of the unit. Given the massive EFC on the Z3801 version of the 
oscillator, it would take a crazy amount of aging
to hit limit.

Bob


> On Mar 3, 2018, at 1:37 PM, Tom Curlee <tcur...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
> 
> Since the Z3801A is being discussed, I thought I'd ask about an issue I'm 
> having with my unit.  I use my Z3801 as my working lab standard for the usual 
> pieces of RF test equipment.  In the past year or so I've had the unit drop 
> out of lock and go into standby mode.  Resetting/cycling power would bring it 
> back into lock for a while, but it generally got worse and now stays in hold 
> over mode.  LH (thanks Mark Sims!!) reports that everything is operating 
> normally except that the it has a PLL unlock.  The one highly suspicious item 
> is that the DAC is at 99.996902% - full output.
> The unit shows it has over 94.5K hours run time, so I suspect that the OCXO 
> has aged to the point that the EFC can't pull it into lock.  I disassembled 
> the OCXO to see if it had a trimmer capacitor like the standard 10811 units.  
> After removing the outer case and foam insulation, I see that the outer 
> heater is one of the thin printed circuit serpentine heaters on what I think 
> is Kapton.  That would need to be peeled off of the case to either get to the 
> hole for the trimmer (if there is one) or to remove the cover for the inner 
> case.
> What I don't understand is the purpose of what looks like another coil or 
> heater wrapped around the Kapton printed circuit heater stuck to the inner 
> case.  This second coil/heater is 2 layers of 1/8" thick red foam wrapped 
> completely around the inner case, with fine copper wires wrapped over each 
> layer.  At least I think there are wires on each layer.  This whole second 
> heater is taped down and I don't want to dig any further until I know a bit 
> more about what I'm doing or find that there isn't a trimmer on the double 
> oven 10811 oscillators.
> Any ideas on the purpose of the outer heater (or whatever it is)?  Does the 
> double oven 10811 have a manual trimmer that I can adjust to bring the 
> oscillator back to the center of the EFC range?  Assuming that I can manually 
> adjust the OCXO back into adjustment range, will there be any issues with the 
> Z3801 performance, things like phase noise, short term stability, etc?
> Any suggestions will be most appreciated.
> Thanks,
> Tom
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