Whilst trying to optimise the VCO calibration on my K2, I've come to the
conclusion that effective frequency counter gate time is slightly short (more than would be accounted for by simply rounding down). The consequence is that one actually wants the 4MHz oscillator slightly low of 4MHz (equivalent to about 20Hz low at 7MHz. I wasn't using the standard calibration method (which seems to rely on the frequency counter and lots of swapping of its probe[A], but rather I trimmed the "4MHz" oscillator to create the same offset and beat against the spot tone as a 41m broadcast carrier[B} when looking at the 7MHz birdie, which should only be about 2% away in frequency. (I assume these birdies are the result of the microprocessors instruction clock, divided from the 4MHz.) What I found was that, after PLL calibration, the birdie seems to end up at about 6.99998 Mhz. Checking the other instances of the birdie tended to confirm that it scaled with frequency in the expected way. In the end I got to better than 5Hz at 7.1MHz by then retuning the oscillator down by its measured error at 15MHz (I probably should have gone for 28). In doing this, I also wondered why: - CAL PLL isn't run at 28MHz, to get greater sensitivity to the frequency (I suspect this is historical, because the basic setup is for 7MHz and one used to have to calibrate per band); - Why isn't a longer gate time used for critical measurements, e.g. when storing CAL FIL data, and when one has decided one needs a new control point in the CAL PLL curve. It wouldn't matter if the microcontroller counter overflowed, as long as one knew the approximate frequency. [A] Has anyone found a good way of strain relieving the KAT2 RF cable, as I'm worried that it will break through flexing when removing the cover, at the point where it is soldered to the board. I'm wary of using adhesives, because they might make it more difficult to repair if it does break. [B] Most of these produce consistent beat tones, and I assume that they are not all off by the same amount. I also think I found a weak WWV at 15MHz, last night, which was beating with the birdie before I introduced the deliberate error. -- David Woolley Emails are not formal business letters, whatever businesses may want. RFC1855 says there should be an address here, but, in a world of spam, that is no longer good advice, as archive address hiding may not work. _______________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Post to: [hidden email] You must be a subscriber to post to the list. Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.): http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com |
David,
The procedure which relies on tuning to a broadcast signal of known frequency and uses the internal counter (along with some swapping of the counter probe between TP1 and TP2) eliminates any slight error in the 'exactness' of the 4 MHz reference - it is automatically equalized out of the equation. Yes, I do believe your observation is correct that the reference must be set a tiny bit lower than 4 MHz, but I have not actually measured it lately. Another way to accurately set the 4 MHz reference is to use a known accurate external frequency counter and measure the frequency at TP1 with both the external counter and the internal counter - adjust C22 until the internal counter displayed frequency matches that of the external counter. If the external counter is accurate to 1 part in 10^-8, then the 4 MHz counter can be relied on for measurement to 1 part in 10^-7 - or 10 Hz at 10 MHz (that is using the 'rule of thumb that the calibration instrument should be 10 times more accurate than the device being calibrated). Not just any counter in the hamshack is sufficiently accurate. 73, Don W3FPR David Woolley wrote: > Whilst trying to optimise the VCO calibration on my K2, I've come to the > conclusion that effective frequency counter gate time is slightly short > (more than would be accounted for by simply rounding down). The > consequence is that one actually wants the 4MHz oscillator slightly low > of 4MHz (equivalent to about 20Hz low at 7MHz. > > I wasn't using the standard calibration method (which seems to rely on > the frequency counter and lots of swapping of its probe[A], but rather I > trimmed the "4MHz" oscillator to create the same offset and beat against > the spot tone as a 41m broadcast carrier[B} when looking at the 7MHz > birdie, which should only be about 2% away in frequency. (I assume > these birdies are the result of the microprocessors instruction clock, > divided from the 4MHz.) > Elecraft mailing list Post to: [hidden email] You must be a subscriber to post to the list. Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.): http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com |
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