B
Bill Sloman
Guest
On Friday, 12 September 2014 03:55:41 UTC+10, Phil Hobbs wrote:
I didn't think that I was saying it was. I did say it was the same from one cycle to the next, but the cycles I had in mind were the 12.5usec over which the full cycle repeats itself. For the DDS creating 10MHz from 155.52MHz every two periods of the 10MHz look pretty similar, which means that any kind of decent low pass filtering won't have all that much crap to get rid of.
Your "0.1% precision" demand comes from *you* not doing the math.
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Bill Sloman, Sydney
On 09/11/2014 01:19 PM, Bill Sloman wrote:
On Friday, 12 September 2014 01:52:01 UTC+10, Phil Hobbs wrote:
On 09/11/2014 11:38 AM, Bill Sloman wrote:
On Friday, 12 September 2014 01:03:22 UTC+10, Phil Hobbs wrote:
On 09/11/2014 08:42 AM, Bill Sloman wrote:
On Thursday, 11 September 2014 19:11:58 UTC+10, Gerhard Hoffmann
wrote:
Am 11.09.2014 um 07:40 schrieb josephkk:
Rubbish. The DAC is just producing a tolerable approximation to a
sine wave, and the imperfections should get largely get filtered out
before the DDS output gets into the phase detector.
Quit pontificating and do the math. It's as I said. Phase error due to
additive signals goes as the spur amplitude divided by the maximum phase
slope of the desired signal. 'Tain't rocket science.
I suspect that you've done the math you usually do, which is for random noise at different frequencies.
In this situation, the harmonic content is pretty much deterministic, and the same from one cycle to the next. As I said, it can create a static phase shift, but no noise or drift. In the fractional-N at 10MHz system, successive cycles will have different phase shifts - within a 6.4nsec window - but that will repeat exactly every 12.5usec, and most of it will cancel out a lot more rapidly.
Wrong. Do the math. If the jitter were the same from cycle to cycle,
you wouldn't need a DDS register any wider than your DAC.
I didn't think that I was saying it was. I did say it was the same from one cycle to the next, but the cycles I had in mind were the 12.5usec over which the full cycle repeats itself. For the DDS creating 10MHz from 155.52MHz every two periods of the 10MHz look pretty similar, which means that any kind of decent low pass filtering won't have all that much crap to get rid of.
Your "0.1% precision" demand comes from *you* not doing the math.
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Bill Sloman, Sydney