Clock Losing Time....

So how would you do that, exactly?

Cheers

Phil Hobbs

--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs 
Principal Consultant 
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC 
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics 

160 North State Road #203 
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510 

hobbs at electrooptical dot net 
http://electrooptical.net
Reply to
Phil Hobbs
Loading thread data ...

So how would you do that, exactly?

Cheers

Phil Hobbs

--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs 
Principal Consultant 
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC 
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics 

160 North State Road #203 
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510 

hobbs at electrooptical dot net 
http://electrooptical.net
Reply to
Phil Hobbs

Tek does that in their fancy scopes--they heatshrink a sense wire to the line input wire. It also gives them advance notice of power loss.

Cheers

Phil Hobbs

--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs 
Principal Consultant 
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC 
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics 

160 North State Road #203 
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510 

hobbs at electrooptical dot net 
http://electrooptical.net
Reply to
Phil Hobbs

when I visited a power plant eons ago they told they have a clock running on the mains and compare it to an atomic clock, and tweak the frequency to get them in sync over some period.

must be done somewhere central since Europe is all synchronous

-Lasse

Reply to
Lasse Langwadt Christensen

I guess you can't expect a lot for $120,000 either.

--

John Larkin         Highland Technology, Inc 
picosecond timing   precision measurement  

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com 
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
Reply to
John Larkin

Run a counter from the oscillator, and a second counter from the AC line. Compare them and adjust the oscillator.

Oh, wait....

--

John Larkin         Highland Technology, Inc 
picosecond timing   precision measurement  

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com 
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
Reply to
John Larkin

y
t

if

I have a GE electric range with completely separate GE microwave mounted ab ove it. They each have clocks, totally independent. I use two hands to star t them simultaneously, probably within 100msecs. They NEVER diverge, both d isplay the same time for months on end until the next mains blip resets the m.

Reply to
bloggs.fredbloggs.fred

Wrong clocks bother me, too.

You may have to press "clear"/"reset" or "clock" at an undocumented point. (The manual is just 500 pages of "don't stick your head in the microwave to get yourself a tan", anyway. :) )

On my ~15 year old GE microwave, when I unplug it and plug it back in, I get:

Lamp test (all segments lit) for ~5 sec. "RESET" displayed. Pressing "clear" at this point blanks the display; the time-of-day clock never appears.

On my unknown age (at least 6 years, probably about 10) GE stove, if power is interrupted, I get: Flashing 12:00 display. I can use the hour+, hour-, min+, min- keys to adjust the time of day. I press "clock". Display stops flashing; hour+/- and min+/- buttons no longer affect the time of day; time-of-day clock runs as normal. I press "clock" again. Display goes blank. I press "clock" again. Flashing display of current time. I can use the hour+, hour-, min+, min- keys to adjust the time of day. ... and so on.

Matt Roberds

Reply to
mroberds

Cooking time,anyone? Timed turn-on anyone?

Reply to
Robert Baer

It is not "reference grade", but the frequency is altered at night to compensate for shifts during daylight hours; so the old-fashioned synchronous wall clocks remain (reasonably) accurate. At least that was the story told when i was a kid.

Reply to
Robert Baer

Sure, but a timer isn't a clock.

Given that most things microwave in minutes, and cool off in minutes, would you load food in the morning and program a microwave to start on its own at, say, 6PM, so something is cooked when you get home from work?

I preferred the ones with just the twist timer. Our Raytheon has so many weird buttons and hidden internal states that it's really annoying. One button is EASY COOK. You'd think that it would always start cooking when you push EASY COOK, but it's far more complex than that.

--

John Larkin         Highland Technology, Inc 
picosecond timing   laser drivers and controllers 

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com 
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
Reply to
John Larkin

Longterm, the 60 Hz is absolutely accurate. Short term, here in California, it's typically 16.666x millisecond period, as good as you could reasonably expect from something so noisy.

--

John Larkin         Highland Technology, Inc 
picosecond timing   laser drivers and controllers 

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com 
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
Reply to
John Larkin

I actually like that approach a lot--it helps keep the PS board completely separate from the main board, which is a win.

Cheers

Phil Hobbs

--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs 
Principal Consultant 
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC 
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics 

160 North State Road #203 
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510 

hobbs at electrooptical dot net 
http://electrooptical.net
Reply to
Phil Hobbs

No, that's not what it means. Every PLL should have a low pass filter at the output of the phase detector. If you have phase disturbances in the reference frequency you simply design the low pass filter to not allow them to pass to the control voltage for the VCO.

Just as the frequency varies. So how would a FLL be superior?

Yes, you want to track the *average*, which you can do just as well with the PLL as you can with the FLL. As others have explained, a FLL is not at all guaranteed to have the same frequency long term if there is any offset in the circuit.

How exactly do you account for missing cycles in a FLL? It would be automatic with a PLL.

--

Rick
Reply to
rickman

You mean the atomic clock is central, right? I doubt the frequency control of the generators is centralized. It is common to use GPS for that sort of thing these days. You have a local control with an internal clock that is synchronized to the received GPS signal. But then the power distribution network predates GPS by many decades and they likely have not bothered to toss out a method that works perfectly well. So I suppose they distribute the central reference signal to every generating station by wire or radio signal.

I know Germany transmits a similar time signal to WWVB here in the US. Is that what they use or does the power system have their own clock?

--

Rick
Reply to
rickman

I have an RCC with an analog dial. When DST goes into effect the clock will run fast to get an hour ahead. When it has to go back an hour in the fall it runs fast for a lot longer, lol. I was up one night when it changed and was amazed at what it was doing. Fortunately it reads the DST state from the time code signal.

I understand that is one of the reasons why they relatively recently changed the modulation to add PM "Enhanced Format". The AM code has no error checking, so one bad bit and a clock can set DST wrong at any given time. The new code includes error checking to make it work right much more often.

--

Rick
Reply to
rickman

Isn't that what duct tape is for?

--

Rick
Reply to
rickman

(and

ed

in

cy

rities

ng

I'll assume in the end they use the mains frequency itself, all of main land Europe is one big connected synchronous grid. So some local powerstati on can't just change the frequency, it would be fighting everyone else

-Lasse

Reply to
Lasse Langwadt Christensen

So the power line frequency in my area is a little

I thought all stateside power stations were locked in phase, so they are all the same frequency. It seems like an impossible job, but it seems like they must be. Comments? Mikek

--
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. 
http://www.avast.com
Reply to
amdx

formatting link

-Lasse

Reply to
Lasse Langwadt Christensen

ElectronDepot website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.