However, I do see a 'jump' in the offset when it's running normally. This does not change when put upside down.
See attached picture, is this normal?
Yes, it is, and mine is locked for 38 days so it is rock stable, see my pictures. A big improvement was when I enabled temperature compensation.
Hi,
yes, I do see the same, and it stayed locked perfectly for days now, even without the temperature compensation
It looks like there is one bigger step up (still small though!), and two small steps down to compensate for that. :-)
I am wondering, maybe it's possible the add an extra to the software, maybe an auto-calibrate routine?
At the moment I am thinking like this:
To add a separate "autocal" routine that can be called either by an interrupt (a button) and/or an extra software command that does the following:
During the "autocal", stop running, put a fixed "h1" value and read the offset, after that put a fixed "h65535" value and read the offset again,
and than do the math, to find the difference and use that to calculate the gain and save that instead of a manual gxx [ENTER] ?
Not sure how useful that would be.
Anyway, food for thought...
But first I am in the process of completing my box, I already added 3 channels of an 74HCT14 in parallel with three 150 Ohm resistors as buffer for both the 10MHz and 1-PPS output, so they are able to drive a 50 Ohm load.
I also want to use the rest of the HC390 to create extra divided frequency outputs, or even a second HC390, also buffered by more 74HCT14's, so I can use it as a scope timing calibrator.
To be continued, :-)
Un saludo,
Leo