Hi All,

What I did:
0: Stopped all SPI traffic and display updating to avoid supply load changes. 1: Used a demodulating spectrum analyzer to listen to the FM at the 200th overtone (2 GHz), only white noise (e.g. dominant high frequencies) 2: Use a modulation analyzer to analyzed the FM modulation of the 100th overtone (1 Ghz), no visible structure in the demodulated signal and the frequency deviation was below 1Hz (is consistent with the measured ADEV) 3: Used a 200 MHz LO into a mixer, mixed with the 20th overtone (200MHz), output of the mixer into a very good audio input (1 Hz to 192 kHz, 24 bit), tuned the LO to zero beat and did an FFT of mixer output displaying from 1 Hz to 96 kHz (due to the 20th overtone in reality starting at 0.005 Hz), no visible structure in the FFT. 4: Also looked at the output of the mixer with a scope to double check for content outside the audio range. The audio looked like noise but not really white noise.

When the DAC is set to zero the "white" noise level is a bit lower compared to a normal DAC value but due to the 0.1Hz low pass filter between the  DAC and the TCXO Vtune the "white" noise can not come from the DAC so probably generated inside the TCXO.

As soon as the display update was enabled, clearly visible frequency swings at the exact rhythm of the display updates where observed. These small swings could be heard as ticking noise in the FM demodulation and where visible in audio FFT and on the scope observing the audio. Stopping or starting the display updates did not have a measurable impact on the ADEV.

The TCXO tuning range is about 50 Hz over 2 Volt, the lowest observable DAC step leading to a frequency change is about 1E-10 or 0.001 Hz The DAC output was measured using a 6.5 digit voltmeter and there was no observable instability. The DAC output did contain high frequency (above 100 kHz) leakage observable with a scope, probably coming from the TCXO through the shared supply or from the ground lead of the probe acting as an antenna for the 10MHz. Due to the ground lead it was not possible to reliable measure the absence of the 10MHz after the 0.1 Hz low pass filter. The TCXO supply sensitivity is 0.5ppm for +/-5% changed. The DAC and TCXO used a dedicated 3.3 V regulator and the DAC has an internal band gap reference for further stabilization. The input and output of the 3.3 V regulator where decoupled with 1000 uF low ESR capacitors. No change was observed with or without the capacitors. The 0.1 Hz low pass filter between the DAC and the TCXO reduced the noise level just visible when the DAC was set not non zero.

I may have reached the limit of the used components. Which is OK as the performance and cost are both within the intended spec.

Erik.

On 20-5-2022 19:40, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi

The typical answer to this issue is to first try to clean up the supply to the
DAC. If that does not fix the issue, you likely need a better DAC. Unless the
TCXO has a crazy large tune range, rational parts should be able to do the job.
If the TCXO has a crazy large range then maybe a different TCXO is the answer.

You can measure this or that to confirm / deny that the problem exists here or
there in the circuit. An audio analyzer that gets down to a bit under 1 Hz 
should
be able to tell you what’s what. Various sound card based approaches likely
would be “good enough” ( yes, ground loops will be fun to take care of ….)

Bob

On May 20, 2022, at 9:26 AM, Erik Kaashoek via time-nuts 
<time-nuts@lists.febo.com> wrote:

During testing a TCXO using a correct Vtune for 10MHz output, the ADEV at tau=1 
second  was measured at 1.08E-10 (see attached plot[1], trace DAC=normal)
When the DAC controlling the Vtune was forced to zero volt output the ADEV at 
tau=1 s reduced to 5.43E-11 (see plot, trace DAC=0)
This clearly hinted at some noise present on the DAC output.
Adding substantial filtering between the DAC and the Vtune input of the TCXO 
and setting to 10MHz resulted in an ADEV at tau=1 s of 7.28E-11 (see plot, 
trace DAC filtered)
All measurements where done with the controller for the Vtune disabled.
The plot contains error bars.

The extra filtering required for the reduction creates a lag of about 10 
seconds in controlling the TCXO and the controller without the filtering was 
nicely able to correct fairly quickly random walks so I'm a bit worried about 
the problems this 10 seconds extra lag may create in tuning the controller loop.

Is a reduction of the ADEV of a 10MHz reference output with 25% (or at most 
50%) for low tau in practice of any relevance if this may cause an increase in 
ADEV for larger tau as the controller may have more difficulty to correctly 
adjust Vtune to correct random walks?

[1] Plot: 
http://athome.kaashoek.com/time-nuts/DAC_Filtering.png<DAC_Filtering.png>_______________________________________________
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