K3 Reference Oscillator

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K3 Reference Oscillator

Ron Durie SIL.org
What is the operating frequency of the K3 TCXO reference oscillator?

Ron Durie
[hidden email]
www.duries.com/DurieElectronics.htm  

 



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Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

wayne burdick
Administrator
49.380 MHz. All signal sources are phase-locked to the refernce. Fine
adjustment occurs in firmware, and once calibrated, it's accurate to
about 1 Hz through 6 meters at the calibration temperature. The
high-stability option is at the same frequency, with firmware
correction to better than 0.5 ppm.

73,
Wayne
N6KR

On Aug 29, 2007, at 8:51 AM, Ron Durie wrote:

> What is the operating frequency of the K3 TCXO reference oscillator?
>


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Re: Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

n6wg
Wayne, given that 49.380 isn't a readily available
calibration freq like, say, WWV, how does a ham
in the field check or set it if needed?
73, Bob N6WG

----- Original Message -----
From: "wayne burdick" <[hidden email]>
To: "Ron Durie" <[hidden email]>
Cc: <[hidden email]>
Sent: Wednesday, August 29, 2007 8:59 AM
Subject: [Elecraft] Re: K3 Reference Oscillator


> 49.380 MHz. All signal sources are phase-locked to the refernce. Fine
> adjustment occurs in firmware, and once calibrated, it's accurate to
> about 1 Hz through 6 meters at the calibration temperature. The
> high-stability option is at the same frequency, with firmware
> correction to better than 0.5 ppm.
>
> 73,
> Wayne
> N6KR
>
> On Aug 29, 2007, at 8:51 AM, Ron Durie wrote:
>
> > What is the operating frequency of the K3 TCXO reference oscillator?
> >
>
>
> ---
>
> http://www.elecraft.com
>
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Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

wayne burdick
Administrator
Hi Bob,

You can tune in a reference signal of your choice and adjust the REF
CAL menu entry in real-time. You can even turn SPOT on while in the
menu entry, then tune for zero beat. Works very well.

73,
Wayne
N6KR


On Aug 29, 2007, at 9:04 AM, Robert Tellefsen wrote:

> Wayne, given that 49.380 isn't a readily available
> calibration freq like, say, WWV, how does a ham
> in the field check or set it if needed?
> 73, Bob N6WG


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Re: Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

Mike S-8
In reply to this post by wayne burdick
At 11:59 AM 8/29/2007, wayne burdick wrote...
>49.380 MHz. All signal sources are phase-locked to the refernce. Fine
>adjustment occurs in firmware, and once calibrated, it's accurate to
>about 1 Hz through 6 meters at the calibration temperature. The
>high-stability option is at the same frequency, with firmware
>correction to better than 0.5 ppm.

49,380,000 * 0.0000005 ppm = 24.69 Hz, and actually worse on 6 meters,
since it's a higher frequency. In any case, it's considerably worse
that the 1 Hz stated for the standard reference. Is that ppm/degree C,
over some temperature range, or ? Is the tempco specified for the
standard reference?

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Re: Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

Tom Hammond-2
In reply to this post by n6wg
Bob:

REALLY SIMPLE!

Go to CW mode, go to the highest WWV freq. you can hear, turn SPOT on
and then crank on the REF CAL menu value until you hear dead zero beat.

Tom

At 11:04 08/29/2007, you wrote:

>Wayne, given that 49.380 isn't a readily available
>calibration freq like, say, WWV, how does a ham
>in the field check or set it if needed?
>73, Bob N6WG
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "wayne burdick" <[hidden email]>
>To: "Ron Durie" <[hidden email]>
>Cc: <[hidden email]>
>Sent: Wednesday, August 29, 2007 8:59 AM
>Subject: [Elecraft] Re: K3 Reference Oscillator
>
>
> > 49.380 MHz. All signal sources are phase-locked to the refernce. Fine
> > adjustment occurs in firmware, and once calibrated, it's accurate to
> > about 1 Hz through 6 meters at the calibration temperature. The
> > high-stability option is at the same frequency, with firmware
> > correction to better than 0.5 ppm.
> >
> > 73,
> > Wayne
> > N6KR
> >
> > On Aug 29, 2007, at 8:51 AM, Ron Durie wrote:
> >
> > > What is the operating frequency of the K3 TCXO reference oscillator?
> > >
> >
> >
> > ---
> >
> > http://www.elecraft.com
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Elecraft mailing list
> > Post to: [hidden email]
> > You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
> > Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.):
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> >
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Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

n6wg
In reply to this post by wayne burdick
Oooooh, way cool.  Neat trick.
That should work like a charm.
Thanks, Wayne.
73, Bob N6WG

----- Original Message -----
From: "wayne burdick" <[hidden email]>
To: "Robert Tellefsen" <[hidden email]>
Cc: <[hidden email]>; "Ron Durie" <[hidden email]>
Sent: Wednesday, August 29, 2007 9:08 AM
Subject: Re: K3 Reference Oscillator


> Hi Bob,
>
> You can tune in a reference signal of your choice and adjust the REF
> CAL menu entry in real-time. You can even turn SPOT on while in the
> menu entry, then tune for zero beat. Works very well.
>
> 73,
> Wayne
> N6KR
>
>
> On Aug 29, 2007, at 9:04 AM, Robert Tellefsen wrote:
>
> > Wayne, given that 49.380 isn't a readily available
> > calibration freq like, say, WWV, how does a ham
> > in the field check or set it if needed?
> > 73, Bob N6WG
>
>
> ---
>
> http://www.elecraft.com
>
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Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

wayne burdick
Administrator
In reply to this post by Mike S-8
Mike,

Maybe I wasn't clear on this. I said it was "accurate to 1 Hz ... at
the calibration temperature." That says nothing about what happens as
the temperature *changes*.

+/- 0.5 ppm (or +/- 1 PPM) is the most common high-stability reference
option available for ham transceivers, K3 included. (And yes, this
applies to the entire temperature range, not per degree C.)

The K3 has an advantage over most transceivers in this regard. The REF
CAL menu entry can be used to enter frequency-vs.-temp data that's
supplied with each individual 1 PPM oscillator. This data is used in
conjunction with an accurate temperature sensor to fine-tune the
reference in 0.2-Hz steps as the temperature changes. So we're actually
expecting something like +/- 0.2 ppm over temperature. But we're
specifying it conservatively.

73,
Wayne
N6KR



On Aug 29, 2007, at 9:29 AM, Mike S wrote:

> At 11:59 AM 8/29/2007, wayne burdick wrote...
>> 49.380 MHz. All signal sources are phase-locked to the refernce. Fine
>> adjustment occurs in firmware, and once calibrated, it's accurate to
>> about 1 Hz through 6 meters at the calibration temperature. The
>> high-stability option is at the same frequency, with firmware
>> correction to better than 0.5 ppm.
>
> 49,380,000 * 0.0000005 ppm = 24.69 Hz, and actually worse on 6 meters,
> since it's a higher frequency. In any case, it's considerably worse
> that the 1 Hz stated for the standard reference. Is that ppm/degree C,
> over some temperature range, or ? Is the tempco specified for the
> standard reference?
>
>

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Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

Dave, G4AON
In reply to this post by Ron Durie SIL.org
0.5 parts per million stability is the same specification as most HF/VHF
rigs fitted with an optional TCXO. That equates to an error of +/- 25 Hz
at 50 MHz. Higher stability can always be obtained at higher cost with
an oven controlled oscillator. There is always the option of an external
reference oscillator for those who aren't happy with a TCXO.

I have a rubidium standard in the shack that was 1 part in 10^11 high in
frequency a couple of days ago, relative to a GPS controlled standard
alongside it... Yet I still have a KTCXO3-1  on order for my K3 - and
will be quite satisfied with 0.5 ppm.

A resolution to 1 Hz doesn't mean the K3 is capable of being set to an
accuracy of 1 Hz at 50 MHz.

73 Dave, G4AON
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Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

Mike S-8
In reply to this post by wayne burdick
At 12:48 PM 8/29/2007, wayne burdick wrote...

>Maybe I wasn't clear on this. I said it was "accurate to 1 Hz ... at
>the calibration temperature." That says nothing about what happens as
>the temperature *changes*.
>
>[high stability] +/- 0.5 ppm ... applies to the entire temperature
>range, not per degree C.
>
>The REF CAL menu entry can be used to enter frequency-vs.-temp data
>that's supplied with each individual 1 PPM oscillator. This data is
>used in conjunction with an accurate temperature sensor to fine-tune
>the reference in 0.2-Hz steps as the temperature changes.

Can the high stability reference also be calibrated at temperature to
achieve 1 Hz, like the standard reference, or must one trust the
calibration table which provides 0.2-0.5 ppm (10-25 Hz) accuracy? If
calibrated at temperature, does the delta then offset other table
entries (which might be used to accommodate crystal aging, for
example), or are individual table entries calibrated? Can a calibration
table be used with the standard reference?

I can see some applications where "1 Hz, but you have to calibrate if
the temp changes" is better than "10-25 Hz, but you never touch it."

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Re: Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

Goody K3NG
In reply to this post by wayne burdick
I've often wondered what the purpose of optional high stability
reference oscillators in HF rigs is.  A couple hertz between friends on
CW, SSB, or AM isn't noticeable.  Even PSK can handle slow drift quite
well.  Is there some other mystery mode or application that requires the
rubidium oscillator-like stability people seem to spend money on and
crave? (Folks using transverters on microwave bands??)


--
Blog: http://thek3ngreport.blogspot.com/

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Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

wayne burdick
Administrator
In reply to this post by wayne burdick

On Aug 29, 2007, at 10:16 AM, Mike S wrote:

> At 12:48 PM 8/29/2007, wayne burdick wrote...
>> Maybe I wasn't clear on this. I said it was "accurate to 1 Hz ... at
>> the calibration temperature." That says nothing about what happens as
>> the temperature *changes*.
>>
>> +/- 0.5 ppm (or +/- 1 PPM) is the most common high-stability
>> reference option available for ham transceivers, K3 included. (And
>> yes, this applies to the entire temperature range, not per degree C.)
>>
>> The K3 has an advantage over most transceivers in this regard. The
>> REF CAL menu entry can be used to enter frequency-vs.-temp data
>> that's supplied with each individual 1 PPM oscillator. This data is
>> used in conjunction with an accurate temperature sensor to fine-tune
>> the reference in 0.2-Hz steps as the temperature changes. So we're
>> actually expecting something like +/- 0.2 ppm over temperature. But
>> we're specifying it conservatively.
>
> I assume then that the high-stability option can also be calibrated to
> achieve 1 Hz through 6 meters at the calibration temperature, too
> (that was not stated)?

You can achieve 1-Hz accuracy at the calibration temperature with
either the standard or high-stability TCXO.

The REF CAL menu entry can also be used to enter Freq-vs.-Temp data
with either one, but this data is only provided for the high-stability
unit. One could enter data for the standard oscillator, too, but you'd
have to determine what data to enter by manually calibrating to a
reference signal at each temperature point (5 degree increments). So
you could set the high-temp CAL points on hot days and the low-temp CAL
points on cold days. I'm not sure what overall temperature stability
you could achieve using this method with the standard unit, but we'll
be trying it at some point. Meanwhile, if you really want the best
stability over temperature, I'd recommend the high-stability unit plus
entering the data as supplied.


>
> Can the standard reference use a calibration table, so it might become
> more accurate as it is hand calibrated at different temperatures?

Exactly -- see above. The manual will describe how to do this.


73,
Wayne
N6KR


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Re: Re: K3 Reference Oscillator

Don Wilhelm-4
In reply to this post by Mike S-8
Mike,

I believe you are mixing parameters.  The K3 can be set to within 1 Hz,
but the 0.5 ppm number applies the drift with temperature changes, and
that is something quite different than accuracy.

73,
Don W3FPR

Mike S wrote:

>
> Can the high stability reference also be calibrated at temperature to
> achieve 1 Hz, like the standard reference, or must one trust the
> calibration table which provides 0.2-0.5 ppm (10-25 Hz) accuracy? If
> calibrated at temperature, does the delta then offset other table
> entries (which might be used to accommodate crystal aging, for
> example), or are individual table entries calibrated? Can a
> calibration table be used with the standard reference?
>
> I can see some applications where "1 Hz, but you have to calibrate if
> the temp changes" is better than "10-25 Hz, but you never touch it."
>
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