Last night has become expensive for me.
[D I S C L A I M E R : And this posting can lead to similar situations for the reader, so beware..]
The first part of the story of last night starts with our change from ISDN/ADSL based telephone line/internet access to the modern standard all-VoIP.
I kept the ISDN telephone line as long as I could but with end of 2018 it was terminated by the carrier so we had no choice.
The switching from old to new technology was done smoothly and surprisingly flawless:
I bought a FritzBox 7590, AVMs top of the line model for DSL-connections, because it has an ISDN S0-Bus-Connector and can act like the former ISDN network to my existing ISDN telephone system: I configured our telephone numbers in the FritzBox, moved the ISDN-link from the carriers network termination to the ISDN S0-connector of the FritzBox and it worked all perfectly.
BUT......on the day of the conversion the line broke down several times only a few ours afterwards.. annoying.
I checked the cabling, the FritzBox configuration, altered single conditions/configuration details and waited day after day for the line to stabilize.
It didn't.
Last night I changed the whole flying DSL-cabling in our apartment and changed it from two plugged chained cables to one star quad J-YY telephone cable by connecting it to the LSA-block of the telephone terminal (avoiding a plugged connection) on the one end and mounting a RJ45-plug on the other end for plugging it into the FritzBox.
The FritzBox detected the length of the to its DSL-counterpart 12m shorter after that -with the same physical length of the cabling in our apartment.
Around midnight I had it all done.
But I wanted to observe line stability so I watched
several siggen and SA related episodes of Shahriars "The Signal Path"-videos under realistic conditions (<>idle state).
Ouch.
Highly infective.
I'm now thinking even more of getting a decent signal generator and spectrum analyser.
Because I couldn't watch youtube videos all the time (my desk chair isn't as comfortable as an armchair) I also started to randomly check OCXOs I have laying around.
My GPSDO is always on (so it's always stabilized well) and I used it as the reference ending up testing the specified accuracy limitations of my Fluke/Philips counters PM6685/PM6681.
I think I'll repeat that when the HP 53132A counter arrives..
Well, in that run I came across the
eevblog thread of BG7TBL GPSDOs and found that it might be better than my
Trimble 57963-D based GPSDO..
I couldn't withstand and ordered one (
the last model).
All this time nuttery lead me to order even more OCXOs:
- Trimble 34310-T 10MHz 12V 50*50*38mm sine wave OCXO (double oven, I think)
- Trimble 65256 10MHz 12V 51*51*15mm sine wave OCXO (as a possible GPSDO spare part, see above..
)
- Oscilloquartz 8663-XS 10Mhz 12V sine wave OCXO
- Morion MV89A double oven 10MHz 12V sine wave OCXO
..all together 10 extra OCXOs*...
...and a 10MHz rubidium reference, a Spectratime LPFRS-01 (
like in this repair thread).
This unit is still well documented by its
manufacturer, that's a big plus for me.
To close the circle (direct translation from German, I hope it's understandable; is there a better native english expression?):
The DSL-line was stable after my work on it but broke down shortly after 03:20 in the morning anyway so I had to further observe it.
I bought the rubidium standard after watching one of Shahriars videos at around 06:00 in the morning and then went to bed afterwards when I had the strong feeling my bank account would severely suffer further if I didn't stop watching Shahriars videos.
URI
PS:
*- Please don't ask what I need these for neither what I need a second (in fact third) GPSDO or a rubidium standard for. It's just addictive behaviour. You could help through expressing your understanding..