Inside an Isotemp OCXO107-10 Oven Controlled Crystal Oscillator

(tomverbeure.github.io)

53 points | by thomasjb 8 days ago

3 comments

  • kamranjon 2 hours ago
    A fun tidbit about crystal oscillators is that they allowed “un-tethered” sound recording on motion picture film cameras. If both your sound recorder and your film camera are using a crystal oscillator as a reference for their motors - you can sync them up in post without needing them to be physically connected during filming.
    • tverbeure 2 hours ago
      I imagine that the accuracy requirements for those crystals are not quite as stringent as the one that I’m talking about here!
  • swalberg 2 hours ago
    Was just talking about frequency references last night -- the ARRL Frequency Measurement Test is this Thursday evening

    https://fmt.arrl.org/

  • tw1984 11 hours ago
    interesting teardown, thanks.

    for homelab application where extra space & power consumption is not a real concern, "temperature resistance" (tempco) is no longer relevant. you can get a constant temperature controller with +/- 0.01 degree range kind of spec for $65. verified using a reputable digital temperature sensor (outside the control loop) and the performance is pretty solid.

    • tverbeure 2 hours ago
      I believe it.

      This DIY GPSDO has a self-heating PCB to keep the temperature constant: https://www.paulvdiyblogs.net/2023/06/gpsdo-version-4.html?m....

      It’s a long blog post, but in the August 24, 2023 update, he mentions that the PCB temperature stays rock solid at 52.9C.

    • RossBencina 7 hours ago
      out of interest, what would the physical setup look like? Hard to imagine you could achieve isotropic temperature approaching +/- 0.01 degree over the size of a typical PCB.
      • tverbeure 43 minutes ago
        Does it have to be isotopic though? The temperature must be constant over time, but a spatial gradient shouldn’t influence the stability of the crystal.

        BTW, checkout my other comment in this thread about a GPSDO PCB with a resistor grid on the backside to evenly heat it.