You might find this helpful if using TimeLab.
There is a section titled 'Masks" and I use it to evaluate my boards vs known baselines. This isn't meant to evaluate one board vs another because the method used to acquire the data might be different for each boards. Also, these work with 'ADEV' plots with the prefix on the line of 'a'. If you have other measurement baseline data like 'p' or 'm' you can add that as well (with the appropriate line prefix character). I think you will find it interesting to look at Corby's Mask vs some of the other much more expensive options just by turning them on, up to three at once.
I added Corby's mask from the data he published on the first page, I think it was. If it has been updated, then the pairs below of (tau, value) would need to be corrected.
I also added Riley's baseline.
Add these statements to your "masks.txt" file by going to Masks, edit mask definitions. The separator commands do just that; organize these within the drop-down list with a separator line.
separator
mask Riley DMTD baseline
a (0.1, 5.24e-13) (0.2, 2.73e-13) (0.4, 1.34e-13) (1.0, 5.43e-14) (2.0, 2.74e-14) (4.0, 1.4e-14) (10.0, 5.71e-15) (20, 2.93e-15) (40, 1.44e-15) (100, 5.91e-16) (200, 3.03e-16) (400, 1.57e-16)
mask Corby DMTD baseline
a (1, 2.46e-13) (2, 1.34e-13) (4, 7.97e-14) (8, 4.51e-14) (16, 2.15e-14) (32, 1.07e-14) (64, 5.66e-15) (128, 3.1e-15) (256, 1.62e-15) (512, 7.26e-16) (1024, 3.73e-16) (2048, 3.63e-16)
separator
I put them right after this line:
mask Kvarz CH1-76A passive maser (5 MHz typical)
a (1, 4.8E-13) (10, 1.5E-13) (100, 4.5E-14) (1000, 1.5E-14) (3600, 8.5E-15) (86400, 4E-15)
P (10, -110) (100, -125) (1000, -150) (10000, -150)
Jerry