GPS Disciplined 10 MHz Reference
Some time ago, I wrote about the Rubidium reference that I connected to SDR. The reference supplies a very stable and precise 10 MHz reference clock to the SDR, so that the sample rate does not drift. Drift in the sample rate causes drift in the received frequency, much like drift in the various oscillators in a conventional radio causes drift.
Just today, I replaced the Rubidium reference with a GPS disciplined reference.
Here’s what I got:
The reference itself is the box in the center. To the right is the power supply, to the left is the antenna.
A GPS disciplined reference or oscillator uses timing signals from the GPS satellites to control,or “discipline” the oscillator built into the reference using a tracking loop. The 10 MHz output is continuously adjusted to keep it at the correct frequency, usually by making very small adjustments and using long time constants (averaging periods), typically around 100 seconds or more.
The 10 MHz output from the reference connects to an input on the netSDR. Internally, that 10 MHz signal is used to produce an 80 MHz clock that is used to drive the A/D sampling.
Here is what the inside of the reference looks like:
Here’s a plot of WWV on 10 MHz:
I believe the frequency shifts you see are due to doppler effects in the ionosphere.
Now I can figure out exactly what frequency Captain Morgan is on.