12-18-2011 01:30 PM
At 100 kHz one cycle takes 10 microseconds. Divide that by 360*1000 to get millidegree resolution = 27.8 picoseconds. This requires a 36 GHz clock.
Lynn
01-03-2012 04:13 AM
I'm curious. Why do you need to do this?
We are an accredited standards laboratory and our main calibration source for phase difference is a 5500-2. And it is not cheap.
If you are trying to build something that matches or is better in accuracy then that - you will have difficulties. Have you considered lowering your goal a little?
01-03-2012 06:23 AM
Just out of fun I plugged in our 1GHz 8bit digizer to the 5500-2 and recorded a full cycle of 1kHz test signals with 500MSps.
There were about 800 samples at zero crossing - with fuzzy edges.
Guess what your problem really is ![]()
01-05-2012 08:59 AM
Ransu,
Thanks for the information. Although he has not admitted it, I think the original poster had a school assignment. I suspect that someone took a quick look at the instrument specs and said "Measure what it puts out."
It could still be a good learning tool, but some realism should be applied.
Lynn