IF one wants to buy / build a frequency counter here's what I would watch for:
- No counters with stupid 10 MHz references. They're slooooow. Remember that in a "modern" reciprocal counter measurement speed is the log10 of the greater frequency (ref / input). E.g. a stupid reciprocal counter with a 10 MHz reference measures a 100 kHz only with 7 digits per second, i.e. 6 digits if you want 10 updates per second.
- Many cheap counters are build like this. Most DIY counters do it like this. Mine uses a 20 MHz ref which is only marginally better. Next one (if I ever come around to design it) will probably use some FPGA or CPLD and a synthesized/PLL'd poly-phase reference ; much faster.
- Better counters still of course use a standard 10 MHz reference, but generate a much higher internal reference clock from it. See next item in the list...
- Good older counters are sometimes still good. For example the HP 5345A (from the early seventies, as seen in
Days Of Future Past) uses a 500 MHz reference (check out their schematics - they use resonance amplifiers locked on harmonics of the 10 MHz reference clock, absolutely amazing circuit technique!) and thus achieves something like 8.7 digits/second.
- Analog front end matters. For many uses a counter which can't measure low level (<100 mVrms) signals is simply useless.
- You want a high-Z input good for at least 50 MHz
- You want adjustable trigger levels
- You probably want a front end which can trigger on narrow pulses
- Consider counters with interpolation, they don't have the usual +-1 gate uncertainty and interpolation usually gives 1 digit/second more meas speed
- For some uses a TIA is to much more useful. TIAs are, however, much more expensive and rare and you really wouldn't ask if you didn't need it
(but if you do, consider Yokogawa TIAs, they're much cheaper than the HP ones and have excellent performance, just like the HP ones — also, for a DIY TIA you really want a top-notch analog front end with the least amount of trigger uncertainty (i.e. jitter) you can get)
- Oh, there's also Spectracom/Pendulum. But chances are that if you find someone selling one of their counters the seller knows what they are really worth ("Worth their weight in gold" - literally). Pendulum split from Philips/Fluke and all their stuff is top-notch.