J
John Larkin
Guest
If I hypothetically had a 10 MHz reference and wanted to lock a 155.52
MHz VCXO to it, the obvious way would be to divide both down to 80 KHz
(the GCD) and drive a phase detector back into the VCXO. But that's a
pretty low frequency to run the PD at; to get picosecond stability, an
ordinary analog phase detector would need better than 1 PPM analog
accuracy, which ain't gonna happen.
I can build an ECL edge-sensitive phase detector that might work, but
80K is still pretty low.
There must be tricks to run the phase detector at a higher frequency.
I could DDS the 155.52 down to 10 MHz, and phase detect at 10 MHz, but
that sounds jitterey to me, and it looks like I can't hit the exact
frequency ratio anyhow.
--
John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
MHz VCXO to it, the obvious way would be to divide both down to 80 KHz
(the GCD) and drive a phase detector back into the VCXO. But that's a
pretty low frequency to run the PD at; to get picosecond stability, an
ordinary analog phase detector would need better than 1 PPM analog
accuracy, which ain't gonna happen.
I can build an ECL edge-sensitive phase detector that might work, but
80K is still pretty low.
There must be tricks to run the phase detector at a higher frequency.
I could DDS the 155.52 down to 10 MHz, and phase detect at 10 MHz, but
that sounds jitterey to me, and it looks like I can't hit the exact
frequency ratio anyhow.
--
John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com