[time-nuts] Short term 10MHz source

W7SLS w7sls.scott at gmail.com
Tue Jan 8 15:31:53 UTC 2019


>> "Kits: TICC Timestamping/Time Interval Counter”
>> https://www.tapr.org/kits_ticc.html <https://www.tapr.org/kits_ticc.html>

Is the TICC a kit in the sense that SMD and/or through-hole component soldering required?
Or perhaps kit = no case, see your favorite 3D printer?
Or?

Thanks,
Scott
W7SLS

> On Jan 8, 2019, at 7:23 AM, Tom Van Baak <tvb at LeapSecond.com> wrote:
> 
>> Hi All sorry for a new be question but
>> what is a TICC
>> regards Paul B  UK
> 
> Hi Paul,
> 
> That is an acronym we often use here on time-nuts; one that a simple google search doesn't answer.
> 
> Ok, there's "TIC" and there's "TICC".
> 
> 1)
> A TIC (Time Interval Counter) is a common 2-input electronic bench instrument that precisely measures time interval; in other words, the elapsed time between a pulse on input A ("start") to a pulse on input B ("stop"). It's like a stopwatch.
> 
> This is very useful for making comparisons between two oscillators or clocks. Often a frequency counter is combined with a period counter + time interval counter + other features and the whole package is called a "universal counter".
> 
> There are dozens of amateur and commercial TIC products. The key feature is often the resolution; that is, how fine a difference between A and B can be measured. For $1 you can time to 1 us or 100 ns. For $10 you can measure down to 10 ns or even 1 ns. Note that complexity and price goes up significantly as the resolution improves to 100 ps or 10 ps or even 1 ps levels.
> 
> A classic example of a TIC is the hp 53131A/53132A universal counter.
> 
> 2)
> The TICC is the cute name for a DIY project by fellow time-nut John Ackerman, N8UR. It cleverly combines a pair of special-purpose TI chips to do sub-nanosecond timing along with an Arduino. The result is an open source time interval counter with specs better than HP's 53132A at a fraction of the cost.
> 
> In addition, the TICC is more than just a plain start/stop TIC; it is actually an independent dual-channel TSC (time stamping counter). This design permits a wider variety of functions than a traditional TIC. The resolution of the TICC is under 100 ps.
> 
> 3)
> Some useful TICC links:
> 
> "Kits: TICC Timestamping/Time Interval Counter"
> https://www.tapr.org/kits_ticc.html
> 
> "TAPR TICC User Manual"
> https://github.com/TAPR/TICC/raw/master/docs/TAPR%20TICC%20User%20Manual.pdf
> 
> "The TICC Timestamping/Time Interval Counter"
> https://www.febo.com/pages/TICC/
> 
> "A High-Resolution Time Interval Counter Using the TAPR TADD-2 and TICC Modules "
> http://www.stable32.com/A%20High-Resolution%20Time%20Interval%20Counter%20Using%20the%20TAPR%20TADD-2%20and%20TICC%20Modules.pdf
> 
> "tutorials and publications, frequency stability measurements"
> http://www.wriley.com/Freq%20Stab%20Meas%20Links.htm
> 
> "Exploring TICC resolution"
> http://leapsecond.com/pages/ticc/
> 
> 4)
> Because the name "TICC" is rather ambiguous I and others prefer to type "TAPR/TICC" instead. Not only does this give TAPR some visibility, but it also makes google searches far better. If you ask google, what is TICC, you don't get a good answer at all. But if you ask google, what is TAPR/TICC, it brings you directly to the description/order page.
> 
> /tvb
> 
> 
> 
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