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Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement

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Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

DB
Dave Brown
Wed, Feb 3, 2016 7:36 PM

And many of these glass envelope crystals were made on very low frequencies-
I have  several below 20 kHz and one as low as 3 kHz in a B7G based envelope
that is 4 inches long.
http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~tractorb/3k1.JPG

DaveB, NZ

----- Original Message -----
From: "Alan Melia" alan.melia@btinternet.com
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"
time-nuts@febo.com
Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2016 6:30 AM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

I think it was unlikely that that it was made "just to see where it would
come out" That is a flexural bar possibly an NT cut. 100KHz standards were
commonly made in this format.
The British GPO had a factory at Mill Hill in N. London making these in
tube-like (valve in UK) enclosures, IO GT and B7G. I have a number of unit
saved from the dumpster (skip in the UK).when the unit closed in the early
60s. Remember there was a surge in telephones in this era and many of
these
frequencies were for FDM carriers on trunk sytems. This is
pre-synthersiser.

Also many special quality tubes were made for VHF in B7G with two or three
inch wires instead of pins to reduce the socket parasitics. so these were
probably still around in Russian factories to produce  components for the
"Foxbat" etc.

Alan
G3NYK

----- Original Message -----
From: "Philip Gladstone" pjsg-timenuts@nospam.gladstonefamily.net
To: time-nuts@febo.com
Sent: Wednesday, February 03, 2016 1:21 PM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

I dug around in my junk box, and found this:

https://plus.google.com/+PhilipGladstone/posts/JBNLMSq2rsE?pid=6247050011623528018&oid=115465617973526125523

This is (according to the markings) a 71.137 kHz crystal made in 1948. I
suspect that they just measured the crystal after manufacture rather than
actually trying to make a 71137Hz crystal....

After this discussion, I'm feeling the need to fire it up and see whether
it still runs, and what the aging has done to the frequency....

Philip

On 03/02/2016 07:11, Bob Camp wrote:

Hi

There is actually a range of crystals shown in the pictures. The gold
plated 5 MHz
crystal is probably an overtone part. It could be fairly precise. The 25
MHz part is
plated with something like silver. It probably is a much lower
precision part. There
likely are long stories that explain just why this or that package got
used in this
or that application.

Bob

On Feb 2, 2016, at 10:04 PM, Jeremy Nichols jn6wfo@gmail.com wrote:

The OP's picture looks very much like the crystals that HP's "Frequency
and Time" division in Santa Clara (02 was their division number) used
to
manufacture back in the 1970s. My picture shows a 1 MHz crystal that HP
used in the predecessor to the HP-105A (perhaps the 101A).

Jeremy

http://s323.photobucket.com/user/Jeremy5848/media/Miscellaneous/Crystal_1140587_zps0jxjpoal.jpg.html

On 2/2/2016 12:24 PM, Don Latham wrote:

You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected from
light,
thermal radiation, and emf.  Won'drous things will happen if the
crystal and
its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd
suggest
a foam
wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too.
Don

iovane--- via time-nuts

I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven,
which
worked
as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's,
and in my
case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was
housed
(still
is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass
enclosure, a
beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with
lots of
tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury
thermometer in
which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the
capillary
tube.

Antonio I8IOV

Da: Bob Camp kb8tq@n1k.org
Data: 02/02/2016 13.15
A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency
measurement"time-nuts@febo.com
Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

Hi

Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit,
putting it

in a

socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part.
Even with

fat pins

sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for
trouble.

Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a
glass

package crystal

and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one
has
a metal

shield

you can (but sometimes don’t)  ground.

Bob

On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson watsondaniel3@gmail.com
wrote:

Hi,

I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a
project.
Here are some pictures:

http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html

Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for
these? I
read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a
B7G
mount,
but I'm not sure if that type might work here.

Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there
any
specific differences about crystals in this package that I should
keep in
mind?

Thanks much,

Dan W.


time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to
https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.


time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to
https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.

And many of these glass envelope crystals were made on very low frequencies- I have several below 20 kHz and one as low as 3 kHz in a B7G based envelope that is 4 inches long. http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~tractorb/3k1.JPG DaveB, NZ ----- Original Message ----- From: "Alan Melia" <alan.melia@btinternet.com> To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" <time-nuts@febo.com> Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2016 6:30 AM Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals >I think it was unlikely that that it was made "just to see where it would > come out" That is a flexural bar possibly an NT cut. 100KHz standards were > commonly made in this format. > The British GPO had a factory at Mill Hill in N. London making these in > tube-like (valve in UK) enclosures, IO GT and B7G. I have a number of unit > saved from the dumpster (skip in the UK).when the unit closed in the early > 60s. Remember there was a surge in telephones in this era and many of > these > frequencies were for FDM carriers on trunk sytems. This is > pre-synthersiser. > > Also many special quality tubes were made for VHF in B7G with two or three > inch wires instead of pins to reduce the socket parasitics. so these were > probably still around in Russian factories to produce components for the > "Foxbat" etc. > > Alan > G3NYK > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Philip Gladstone" <pjsg-timenuts@nospam.gladstonefamily.net> > To: <time-nuts@febo.com> > Sent: Wednesday, February 03, 2016 1:21 PM > Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals > > >>I dug around in my junk box, and found this: >> >> https://plus.google.com/+PhilipGladstone/posts/JBNLMSq2rsE?pid=6247050011623528018&oid=115465617973526125523 >> >> This is (according to the markings) a 71.137 kHz crystal made in 1948. I >> suspect that they just measured the crystal after manufacture rather than >> actually trying to make a 71137Hz crystal.... >> >> After this discussion, I'm feeling the need to fire it up and see whether >> it still runs, and what the aging has done to the frequency.... >> >> Philip >> >> On 03/02/2016 07:11, Bob Camp wrote: >>> Hi >>> >>> There is actually a range of crystals shown in the pictures. The gold >>> plated 5 MHz >>> crystal is probably an overtone part. It could be fairly precise. The 25 >>> MHz part is >>> plated with something like silver. It probably is a *much* lower >>> precision part. There >>> likely are long stories that explain just why this or that package got >>> used in this >>> or that application. >>> >>> Bob >>> >>>> On Feb 2, 2016, at 10:04 PM, Jeremy Nichols <jn6wfo@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>>> The OP's picture looks very much like the crystals that HP's "Frequency >>>> and Time" division in Santa Clara (02 was their division number) used >>>> to >>>> manufacture back in the 1970s. My picture shows a 1 MHz crystal that HP >>>> used in the predecessor to the HP-105A (perhaps the 101A). >>>> >>>> Jeremy >>>> >>>> http://s323.photobucket.com/user/Jeremy5848/media/Miscellaneous/Crystal_1140587_zps0jxjpoal.jpg.html >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> On 2/2/2016 12:24 PM, Don Latham wrote: >>>>> You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected from >>>>> light, >>>>> thermal radiation, and emf. Won'drous things will happen if the >>>>> crystal and >>>>> its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd >>>>> suggest >>>>> a foam >>>>> wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too. >>>>> Don >>>>> >>>>> iovane--- via time-nuts >>>>>> I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven, >>>>>> which >>>>>> worked >>>>>> as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's, >>>>>> and in my >>>>>> case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was >>>>>> housed >>>>>> (still >>>>>> is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass >>>>>> enclosure, a >>>>>> beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with >>>>>> lots of >>>>>> tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury >>>>>> thermometer in >>>>>> which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the >>>>>> capillary >>>>>> tube. >>>>>> >>>>>> Antonio I8IOV >>>>>> >>>>>>> Da: Bob Camp <kb8tq@n1k.org> >>>>>>> Data: 02/02/2016 13.15 >>>>>>> A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency >>>>>>> measurement"<time-nuts@febo.com> >>>>>>> Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Hi >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit, >>>>>>> putting it >>>>>> in a >>>>>>> socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part. >>>>>>> Even with >>>>>> fat pins >>>>>>> sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for >>>>>>> trouble. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a >>>>>>> glass >>>>>> package crystal >>>>>>> and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one >>>>>>> has >>>>>>> a metal >>>>>> shield >>>>>>> you can (but sometimes don’t) ground. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Bob >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson <watsondaniel3@gmail.com> >>>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a >>>>>>>> project. >>>>>>>> Here are some pictures: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for >>>>>>>> these? I >>>>>>>> read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a >>>>>>>> B7G >>>>>>>> mount, >>>>>>>> but I'm not sure if that type might work here. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there >>>>>>>> any >>>>>>>> specific differences about crystals in this package that I should >>>>>>>> keep in >>>>>>>> mind? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Thanks much, >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Dan W. >>>>>> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com >> To unsubscribe, go to >> https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts >> and follow the instructions there. > > _______________________________________________ > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com > To unsubscribe, go to > https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts > and follow the instructions there.
TS
Tim Shoppa
Wed, Feb 3, 2016 7:41 PM

Very interesting! Hazarding a guess.... higher end of a NT-cut? Looks much
like the third from the right here:
http://www.pbgquartz.com/www.pbgquartz.com/images/foto1.jpg

Some crystals in this range were used as filters or LO's in telecom
SSB-type channel banks (I think that's what the vendor who made that photo,
used to specialize in) but I don't know if those were generally NT cut or
what.

Tim N3QE

On Wed, Feb 3, 2016 at 8:21 AM, Philip Gladstone <
pjsg-timenuts@nospam.gladstonefamily.net> wrote:

I dug around in my junk box, and found this:

https://plus.google.com/+PhilipGladstone/posts/JBNLMSq2rsE?pid=6247050011623528018&oid=115465617973526125523

This is (according to the markings) a 71.137 kHz crystal made in 1948. I
suspect that they just measured the crystal after manufacture rather than
actually trying to make a 71137Hz crystal....

After this discussion, I'm feeling the need to fire it up and see whether
it still runs, and what the aging has done to the frequency....

Philip

On 03/02/2016 07:11, Bob Camp wrote:

Hi

There is actually a range of crystals shown in the pictures. The gold
plated 5 MHz
crystal is probably an overtone part. It could be fairly precise. The 25
MHz part is
plated with something like silver. It probably is a much lower
precision part. There
likely are long stories that explain just why this or that package got
used in this
or that application.

Bob

On Feb 2, 2016, at 10:04 PM, Jeremy Nichols jn6wfo@gmail.com wrote:

The OP's picture looks very much like the crystals that HP's "Frequency
and Time" division in Santa Clara (02 was their division number) used to
manufacture back in the 1970s. My picture shows a 1 MHz crystal that HP
used in the predecessor to the HP-105A (perhaps the 101A).

Jeremy

http://s323.photobucket.com/user/Jeremy5848/media/Miscellaneous/Crystal_1140587_zps0jxjpoal.jpg.html

On 2/2/2016 12:24 PM, Don Latham wrote:

You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected from
light,
thermal radiation, and emf.  Won'drous things will happen if the
crystal and
its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd suggest
a foam
wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too.
Don

iovane--- via time-nuts

I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven,
which
worked
as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's,
and in my
case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was housed
(still
is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass
enclosure, a
beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with
lots of
tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury
thermometer in
which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the
capillary
tube.

Antonio I8IOV

Da: Bob Camp kb8tq@n1k.org

Data: 02/02/2016 13.15
A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"<
time-nuts@febo.com>
Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

Hi

Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit,
putting it

in a

socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part.
Even with

fat pins

sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble.

Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a
glass

package crystal

and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has
a metal

shield

you can (but sometimes don’t)  ground.

Bob

On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson watsondaniel3@gmail.com

wrote:

Hi,

I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a
project.
Here are some pictures:

http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html

Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for
these? I
read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a B7G
mount,
but I'm not sure if that type might work here.

Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there
any
specific differences about crystals in this package that I should
keep in
mind?

Thanks much,

Dan W.


time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to
https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.

Very interesting! Hazarding a guess.... higher end of a NT-cut? Looks much like the third from the right here: http://www.pbgquartz.com/www.pbgquartz.com/images/foto1.jpg Some crystals in this range were used as filters or LO's in telecom SSB-type channel banks (I think that's what the vendor who made that photo, used to specialize in) but I don't know if those were generally NT cut or what. Tim N3QE On Wed, Feb 3, 2016 at 8:21 AM, Philip Gladstone < pjsg-timenuts@nospam.gladstonefamily.net> wrote: > I dug around in my junk box, and found this: > > > https://plus.google.com/+PhilipGladstone/posts/JBNLMSq2rsE?pid=6247050011623528018&oid=115465617973526125523 > > This is (according to the markings) a 71.137 kHz crystal made in 1948. I > suspect that they just measured the crystal after manufacture rather than > actually trying to make a 71137Hz crystal.... > > After this discussion, I'm feeling the need to fire it up and see whether > it still runs, and what the aging has done to the frequency.... > > Philip > > > On 03/02/2016 07:11, Bob Camp wrote: > >> Hi >> >> There is actually a range of crystals shown in the pictures. The gold >> plated 5 MHz >> crystal is probably an overtone part. It could be fairly precise. The 25 >> MHz part is >> plated with something like silver. It probably is a *much* lower >> precision part. There >> likely are long stories that explain just why this or that package got >> used in this >> or that application. >> >> Bob >> >> On Feb 2, 2016, at 10:04 PM, Jeremy Nichols <jn6wfo@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> The OP's picture looks very much like the crystals that HP's "Frequency >>> and Time" division in Santa Clara (02 was their division number) used to >>> manufacture back in the 1970s. My picture shows a 1 MHz crystal that HP >>> used in the predecessor to the HP-105A (perhaps the 101A). >>> >>> Jeremy >>> >>> >>> http://s323.photobucket.com/user/Jeremy5848/media/Miscellaneous/Crystal_1140587_zps0jxjpoal.jpg.html >>> >>> >>> >>> On 2/2/2016 12:24 PM, Don Latham wrote: >>> >>>> You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected from >>>> light, >>>> thermal radiation, and emf. Won'drous things will happen if the >>>> crystal and >>>> its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd suggest >>>> a foam >>>> wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too. >>>> Don >>>> >>>> iovane--- via time-nuts >>>> >>>>> I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven, >>>>> which >>>>> worked >>>>> as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's, >>>>> and in my >>>>> case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was housed >>>>> (still >>>>> is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass >>>>> enclosure, a >>>>> beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with >>>>> lots of >>>>> tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury >>>>> thermometer in >>>>> which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the >>>>> capillary >>>>> tube. >>>>> >>>>> Antonio I8IOV >>>>> >>>>> Da: Bob Camp <kb8tq@n1k.org> >>>>>> Data: 02/02/2016 13.15 >>>>>> A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"< >>>>>> time-nuts@febo.com> >>>>>> Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals >>>>>> >>>>>> Hi >>>>>> >>>>>> Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit, >>>>>> putting it >>>>>> >>>>> in a >>>>> >>>>>> socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part. >>>>>> Even with >>>>>> >>>>> fat pins >>>>> >>>>>> sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble. >>>>>> >>>>>> Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a >>>>>> glass >>>>>> >>>>> package crystal >>>>> >>>>>> and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has >>>>>> a metal >>>>>> >>>>> shield >>>>> >>>>>> you can (but sometimes don’t) ground. >>>>>> >>>>>> Bob >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson <watsondaniel3@gmail.com> >>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a >>>>>>> project. >>>>>>> Here are some pictures: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for >>>>>>> these? I >>>>>>> read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a B7G >>>>>>> mount, >>>>>>> but I'm not sure if that type might work here. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there >>>>>>> any >>>>>>> specific differences about crystals in this package that I should >>>>>>> keep in >>>>>>> mind? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Thanks much, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Dan W. >>>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> > _______________________________________________ > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com > To unsubscribe, go to > https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts > and follow the instructions there. >
IS
Ian Stirling
Wed, Feb 3, 2016 9:41 PM

On 02/02/2016 03:24 PM, Don Latham wrote:

You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected from light,
thermal radiation, and emf.  Won'drous things will happen if the crystal and
its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd suggest a foam
wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too.

I have a 100 kHz glass "Crystal Unit" made by G.E.C., type JCF/193
with a serial number and sealed in a valve/tube with seven pins.
I removed it from my Eddystone EA12 that I bought from Tom Roberts,
G3YTO, SK 1985. It has a black shield with a spring inside at the top
so that it grips the base. The valve that produced 100 kHz markers for
dial calibration failed and I don't use the EA12 these days.
It will be interesting to see how stable it is and what the effect
of light and heat on it is when I start experimenting.

Ian, G4ICV, AB2GR

On 02/02/2016 03:24 PM, Don Latham wrote: > You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected from light, > thermal radiation, and emf. Won'drous things will happen if the crystal and > its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd suggest a foam > wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too. I have a 100 kHz glass "Crystal Unit" made by G.E.C., type JCF/193 with a serial number and sealed in a valve/tube with seven pins. I removed it from my Eddystone EA12 that I bought from Tom Roberts, G3YTO, SK 1985. It has a black shield with a spring inside at the top so that it grips the base. The valve that produced 100 kHz markers for dial calibration failed and I don't use the EA12 these days. It will be interesting to see how stable it is and what the effect of light and heat on it is when I start experimenting. Ian, G4ICV, AB2GR --
SW
Steve Wiseman
Wed, Feb 3, 2016 9:54 PM

On 3 February 2016 at 19:41, Tim Shoppa tshoppa@gmail.com wrote:

Very interesting! Hazarding a guess.... higher end of a NT-cut? Looks much
like the third from the right here:
http://www.pbgquartz.com/www.pbgquartz.com/images/foto1.jpg

I have a GEC 1Kc/s crystal that looks like the third from right. It's
a massive slab of quartz - I occasionally wonder about spinning it up
to see if the motion's detectable with a bit of crude interferometry,
but I have no idea about permitted drive levels and don't want to
damage it. It's hard to imagine it would be stable or
time-nuts-worthy, but hints would be welcome.

Steve

On 3 February 2016 at 19:41, Tim Shoppa <tshoppa@gmail.com> wrote: > Very interesting! Hazarding a guess.... higher end of a NT-cut? Looks much > like the third from the right here: > http://www.pbgquartz.com/www.pbgquartz.com/images/foto1.jpg I have a GEC 1Kc/s crystal that looks like the third from right. It's a massive slab of quartz - I occasionally wonder about spinning it up to see if the motion's detectable with a bit of crude interferometry, but I have no idea about permitted drive levels and don't want to damage it. It's hard to imagine it would be stable or time-nuts-worthy, but hints would be welcome. Steve
BC
Bob Camp
Wed, Feb 3, 2016 11:13 PM

Hi

Back in the early days of multiplex transmission, frequency division multiplex was king. There were a
lot of systems. They used a variety of schemes to pack the baseband signals into sub 2 MHz sort of
arrangements. For quite a while the state of the art was to use various low frequency crystals to generate
the multitude of careers that spread out from audio up to maybe a MHz or two.

As a result of this, there were a LOT of crystals made at weird low frequencies. Some of these systems lived
on well after the advent of digital multiplex systems. Once you have 400 miles of system A it’s easier to extend
it a “few more miles” than to re-do the whole thing. Spares for these systems were made at least into the 1990’s.

While these are really cool looking parts (try a strobe on your 1 KHz bar …) they rarely are very stable. They are
more interesting as art than as frequency standards.

Bob

On Feb 3, 2016, at 2:36 PM, Dave Brown tractorb@ihug.co.nz wrote:

And many of these glass envelope crystals were made on very low frequencies- I have  several below 20 kHz and one as low as 3 kHz in a B7G based envelope that is 4 inches long.
http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~tractorb/3k1.JPG

DaveB, NZ

----- Original Message ----- From: "Alan Melia" alan.melia@btinternet.com
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" time-nuts@febo.com
Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2016 6:30 AM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

I think it was unlikely that that it was made "just to see where it would
come out" That is a flexural bar possibly an NT cut. 100KHz standards were
commonly made in this format.
The British GPO had a factory at Mill Hill in N. London making these in
tube-like (valve in UK) enclosures, IO GT and B7G. I have a number of unit
saved from the dumpster (skip in the UK).when the unit closed in the early
60s. Remember there was a surge in telephones in this era and many of these
frequencies were for FDM carriers on trunk sytems. This is pre-synthersiser.

Also many special quality tubes were made for VHF in B7G with two or three inch wires instead of pins to reduce the socket parasitics. so these were probably still around in Russian factories to produce  components for the "Foxbat" etc.

Alan
G3NYK

----- Original Message ----- From: "Philip Gladstone" pjsg-timenuts@nospam.gladstonefamily.net
To: time-nuts@febo.com
Sent: Wednesday, February 03, 2016 1:21 PM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

I dug around in my junk box, and found this:

https://plus.google.com/+PhilipGladstone/posts/JBNLMSq2rsE?pid=6247050011623528018&oid=115465617973526125523

This is (according to the markings) a 71.137 kHz crystal made in 1948. I
suspect that they just measured the crystal after manufacture rather than
actually trying to make a 71137Hz crystal....

After this discussion, I'm feeling the need to fire it up and see whether
it still runs, and what the aging has done to the frequency....

Philip

On 03/02/2016 07:11, Bob Camp wrote:

Hi

There is actually a range of crystals shown in the pictures. The gold
plated 5 MHz
crystal is probably an overtone part. It could be fairly precise. The 25
MHz part is
plated with something like silver. It probably is a much lower
precision part. There
likely are long stories that explain just why this or that package got
used in this
or that application.

Bob

On Feb 2, 2016, at 10:04 PM, Jeremy Nichols jn6wfo@gmail.com wrote:

The OP's picture looks very much like the crystals that HP's "Frequency
and Time" division in Santa Clara (02 was their division number) used to
manufacture back in the 1970s. My picture shows a 1 MHz crystal that HP
used in the predecessor to the HP-105A (perhaps the 101A).

Jeremy

http://s323.photobucket.com/user/Jeremy5848/media/Miscellaneous/Crystal_1140587_zps0jxjpoal.jpg.html

On 2/2/2016 12:24 PM, Don Latham wrote:

You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected from
light,
thermal radiation, and emf.  Won'drous things will happen if the
crystal and
its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd suggest
a foam
wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too.
Don

iovane--- via time-nuts

I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven,
which
worked
as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's,
and in my
case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was housed
(still
is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass
enclosure, a
beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with
lots of
tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury
thermometer in
which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the
capillary
tube.

Antonio I8IOV

Da: Bob Camp kb8tq@n1k.org
Data: 02/02/2016 13.15
A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency
measurement"time-nuts@febo.com
Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

Hi

Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit,
putting it

in a

socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part.
Even with

fat pins

sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble.

Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a
glass

package crystal

and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has
a metal

shield

you can (but sometimes don’t)  ground.

Bob

On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson watsondaniel3@gmail.com
wrote:

Hi,

I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a
project.
Here are some pictures:

http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html

Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for
these? I
read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a B7G
mount,
but I'm not sure if that type might work here.

Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there
any
specific differences about crystals in this package that I should
keep in
mind?

Thanks much,

Dan W.


time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to
https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.


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To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
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and follow the instructions there.

Hi Back in the early days of multiplex transmission, frequency division multiplex was king. There were a lot of systems. They used a variety of schemes to pack the baseband signals into sub 2 MHz sort of arrangements. For quite a while the state of the art was to use various low frequency crystals to generate the multitude of careers that spread out from audio up to maybe a MHz or two. As a result of this, there were a *LOT* of crystals made at weird low frequencies. Some of these systems lived on well after the advent of digital multiplex systems. Once you have 400 miles of system A it’s easier to extend it a “few more miles” than to re-do the whole thing. Spares for these systems were made at least into the 1990’s. While these are really cool looking parts (try a strobe on your 1 KHz bar …) they rarely are very stable. They are more interesting as art than as frequency standards. Bob > On Feb 3, 2016, at 2:36 PM, Dave Brown <tractorb@ihug.co.nz> wrote: > > And many of these glass envelope crystals were made on very low frequencies- I have several below 20 kHz and one as low as 3 kHz in a B7G based envelope that is 4 inches long. > http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~tractorb/3k1.JPG > > DaveB, NZ > > ----- Original Message ----- From: "Alan Melia" <alan.melia@btinternet.com> > To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" <time-nuts@febo.com> > Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2016 6:30 AM > Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals > > >> I think it was unlikely that that it was made "just to see where it would >> come out" That is a flexural bar possibly an NT cut. 100KHz standards were >> commonly made in this format. >> The British GPO had a factory at Mill Hill in N. London making these in >> tube-like (valve in UK) enclosures, IO GT and B7G. I have a number of unit >> saved from the dumpster (skip in the UK).when the unit closed in the early >> 60s. Remember there was a surge in telephones in this era and many of these >> frequencies were for FDM carriers on trunk sytems. This is pre-synthersiser. >> >> Also many special quality tubes were made for VHF in B7G with two or three inch wires instead of pins to reduce the socket parasitics. so these were probably still around in Russian factories to produce components for the "Foxbat" etc. >> >> Alan >> G3NYK >> >> >> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Philip Gladstone" <pjsg-timenuts@nospam.gladstonefamily.net> >> To: <time-nuts@febo.com> >> Sent: Wednesday, February 03, 2016 1:21 PM >> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals >> >> >>> I dug around in my junk box, and found this: >>> >>> https://plus.google.com/+PhilipGladstone/posts/JBNLMSq2rsE?pid=6247050011623528018&oid=115465617973526125523 >>> >>> This is (according to the markings) a 71.137 kHz crystal made in 1948. I >>> suspect that they just measured the crystal after manufacture rather than >>> actually trying to make a 71137Hz crystal.... >>> >>> After this discussion, I'm feeling the need to fire it up and see whether >>> it still runs, and what the aging has done to the frequency.... >>> >>> Philip >>> >>> On 03/02/2016 07:11, Bob Camp wrote: >>>> Hi >>>> >>>> There is actually a range of crystals shown in the pictures. The gold >>>> plated 5 MHz >>>> crystal is probably an overtone part. It could be fairly precise. The 25 >>>> MHz part is >>>> plated with something like silver. It probably is a *much* lower >>>> precision part. There >>>> likely are long stories that explain just why this or that package got >>>> used in this >>>> or that application. >>>> >>>> Bob >>>> >>>>> On Feb 2, 2016, at 10:04 PM, Jeremy Nichols <jn6wfo@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> The OP's picture looks very much like the crystals that HP's "Frequency >>>>> and Time" division in Santa Clara (02 was their division number) used to >>>>> manufacture back in the 1970s. My picture shows a 1 MHz crystal that HP >>>>> used in the predecessor to the HP-105A (perhaps the 101A). >>>>> >>>>> Jeremy >>>>> >>>>> http://s323.photobucket.com/user/Jeremy5848/media/Miscellaneous/Crystal_1140587_zps0jxjpoal.jpg.html >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> On 2/2/2016 12:24 PM, Don Latham wrote: >>>>>> You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected from >>>>>> light, >>>>>> thermal radiation, and emf. Won'drous things will happen if the >>>>>> crystal and >>>>>> its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd suggest >>>>>> a foam >>>>>> wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too. >>>>>> Don >>>>>> >>>>>> iovane--- via time-nuts >>>>>>> I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven, >>>>>>> which >>>>>>> worked >>>>>>> as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's, >>>>>>> and in my >>>>>>> case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was housed >>>>>>> (still >>>>>>> is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass >>>>>>> enclosure, a >>>>>>> beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with >>>>>>> lots of >>>>>>> tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury >>>>>>> thermometer in >>>>>>> which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the >>>>>>> capillary >>>>>>> tube. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Antonio I8IOV >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Da: Bob Camp <kb8tq@n1k.org> >>>>>>>> Data: 02/02/2016 13.15 >>>>>>>> A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency >>>>>>>> measurement"<time-nuts@febo.com> >>>>>>>> Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Hi >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit, >>>>>>>> putting it >>>>>>> in a >>>>>>>> socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part. >>>>>>>> Even with >>>>>>> fat pins >>>>>>>> sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a >>>>>>>> glass >>>>>>> package crystal >>>>>>>> and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has >>>>>>>> a metal >>>>>>> shield >>>>>>>> you can (but sometimes don’t) ground. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Bob >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson <watsondaniel3@gmail.com> >>>>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a >>>>>>>>> project. >>>>>>>>> Here are some pictures: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for >>>>>>>>> these? I >>>>>>>>> read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a B7G >>>>>>>>> mount, >>>>>>>>> but I'm not sure if that type might work here. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there >>>>>>>>> any >>>>>>>>> specific differences about crystals in this package that I should >>>>>>>>> keep in >>>>>>>>> mind? >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Thanks much, >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Dan W. >>>>>>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com >>> To unsubscribe, go to >>> https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts >>> and follow the instructions there. >> >> _______________________________________________ >> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com >> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts >> and follow the instructions there. > > _______________________________________________ > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com > To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts > and follow the instructions there.
MD
Magnus Danielson
Thu, Feb 4, 2016 5:22 AM

Hi,

The Frequency Division Multiplex (FDM) efforts also resorted in a
technique called the polyphase network. It's a type of network designed
such that the rotation vector rotating in one direction is supported,
but the other direction is suppressed. This is the same as positive
frequencies is supported but negative is suppressed. The principle works
for 2 phases, but you can run on more. This is naturally ideal for
Single Side Band (SSB) operation which is what you typically want to use
for FDM networks as you can pack the voice calls more densely and thus
run for longer cable runs without the bandwidth of the cable being a
problem, which the more wasteful AM would do, as you have double
sidebands then.

Polyphase filters have since become staple-ware filter as it lends
itself to nice sub-band decimation processing in digital processing,
providing suitable for sub-band filter banks such as those being used
for MPEG audio compression for instance.

I rarely see the roots being referenced, but I managed to get hold of
Mike Gingell who's PhD is really the root of this. He was friendly
enough to send me not only the PhD but a few papers and patent which I
host here:
http://rubidium.dyndns.org/~magnus/synths/friends/gingell/
The papers is a gentle way into the way of thinking.

For radio-amateurs, this network may ring a bell:
http://hanssummers.com/images/stories/polyphase/circuit/circuitnetwork.gif
Hans Summers have used it in conjunction with a Tayloe detector for a 80
m receiver:
http://hanssummers.com/images/stories/polyphase/circuit/circuittayloe.gif
Look at his complete article here:
http://hanssummers.com/polyphase.html

Cheers,
Magnus

On 02/04/2016 12:13 AM, Bob Camp wrote:

Hi

Back in the early days of multiplex transmission, frequency division multiplex was king. There were a
lot of systems. They used a variety of schemes to pack the baseband signals into sub 2 MHz sort of
arrangements. For quite a while the state of the art was to use various low frequency crystals to generate
the multitude of careers that spread out from audio up to maybe a MHz or two.

As a result of this, there were a LOT of crystals made at weird low frequencies. Some of these systems lived
on well after the advent of digital multiplex systems. Once you have 400 miles of system A it’s easier to extend
it a “few more miles” than to re-do the whole thing. Spares for these systems were made at least into the 1990’s.

While these are really cool looking parts (try a strobe on your 1 KHz bar …) they rarely are very stable. They are
more interesting as art than as frequency standards.

Bob

On Feb 3, 2016, at 2:36 PM, Dave Brown tractorb@ihug.co.nz wrote:

And many of these glass envelope crystals were made on very low frequencies- I have  several below 20 kHz and one as low as 3 kHz in a B7G based envelope that is 4 inches long.
http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~tractorb/3k1.JPG

DaveB, NZ

----- Original Message ----- From: "Alan Melia" alan.melia@btinternet.com
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" time-nuts@febo.com
Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2016 6:30 AM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

I think it was unlikely that that it was made "just to see where it would
come out" That is a flexural bar possibly an NT cut. 100KHz standards were
commonly made in this format.
The British GPO had a factory at Mill Hill in N. London making these in
tube-like (valve in UK) enclosures, IO GT and B7G. I have a number of unit
saved from the dumpster (skip in the UK).when the unit closed in the early
60s. Remember there was a surge in telephones in this era and many of these
frequencies were for FDM carriers on trunk sytems. This is pre-synthersiser.

Also many special quality tubes were made for VHF in B7G with two or three inch wires instead of pins to reduce the socket parasitics. so these were probably still around in Russian factories to produce  components for the "Foxbat" etc.

Alan
G3NYK

----- Original Message ----- From: "Philip Gladstone" pjsg-timenuts@nospam.gladstonefamily.net
To: time-nuts@febo.com
Sent: Wednesday, February 03, 2016 1:21 PM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

I dug around in my junk box, and found this:

https://plus.google.com/+PhilipGladstone/posts/JBNLMSq2rsE?pid=6247050011623528018&oid=115465617973526125523

This is (according to the markings) a 71.137 kHz crystal made in 1948. I
suspect that they just measured the crystal after manufacture rather than
actually trying to make a 71137Hz crystal....

After this discussion, I'm feeling the need to fire it up and see whether
it still runs, and what the aging has done to the frequency....

Philip

On 03/02/2016 07:11, Bob Camp wrote:

Hi

There is actually a range of crystals shown in the pictures. The gold
plated 5 MHz
crystal is probably an overtone part. It could be fairly precise. The 25
MHz part is
plated with something like silver. It probably is a much lower
precision part. There
likely are long stories that explain just why this or that package got
used in this
or that application.

Bob

On Feb 2, 2016, at 10:04 PM, Jeremy Nichols jn6wfo@gmail.com wrote:

The OP's picture looks very much like the crystals that HP's "Frequency
and Time" division in Santa Clara (02 was their division number) used to
manufacture back in the 1970s. My picture shows a 1 MHz crystal that HP
used in the predecessor to the HP-105A (perhaps the 101A).

Jeremy

http://s323.photobucket.com/user/Jeremy5848/media/Miscellaneous/Crystal_1140587_zps0jxjpoal.jpg.html

On 2/2/2016 12:24 PM, Don Latham wrote:

You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected from
light,
thermal radiation, and emf.  Won'drous things will happen if the
crystal and
its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd suggest
a foam
wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too.
Don

iovane--- via time-nuts

I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven,
which
worked
as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's,
and in my
case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was housed
(still
is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass
enclosure, a
beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with
lots of
tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury
thermometer in
which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the
capillary
tube.

Antonio I8IOV

Da: Bob Camp kb8tq@n1k.org
Data: 02/02/2016 13.15
A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency
measurement"time-nuts@febo.com
Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

Hi

Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit,
putting it

in a

socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part.
Even with

fat pins

sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble.

Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a
glass

package crystal

and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has
a metal

shield

you can (but sometimes don’t)  ground.

Bob

On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson watsondaniel3@gmail.com
wrote:

Hi,

I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a
project.
Here are some pictures:

http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html

Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for
these? I
read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a B7G
mount,
but I'm not sure if that type might work here.

Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there
any
specific differences about crystals in this package that I should
keep in
mind?

Thanks much,

Dan W.


time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to
https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.


time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.


time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.


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To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.

Hi, The Frequency Division Multiplex (FDM) efforts also resorted in a technique called the polyphase network. It's a type of network designed such that the rotation vector rotating in one direction is supported, but the other direction is suppressed. This is the same as positive frequencies is supported but negative is suppressed. The principle works for 2 phases, but you can run on more. This is naturally ideal for Single Side Band (SSB) operation which is what you typically want to use for FDM networks as you can pack the voice calls more densely and thus run for longer cable runs without the bandwidth of the cable being a problem, which the more wasteful AM would do, as you have double sidebands then. Polyphase filters have since become staple-ware filter as it lends itself to nice sub-band decimation processing in digital processing, providing suitable for sub-band filter banks such as those being used for MPEG audio compression for instance. I rarely see the roots being referenced, but I managed to get hold of Mike Gingell who's PhD is really the root of this. He was friendly enough to send me not only the PhD but a few papers and patent which I host here: http://rubidium.dyndns.org/~magnus/synths/friends/gingell/ The papers is a gentle way into the way of thinking. For radio-amateurs, this network may ring a bell: http://hanssummers.com/images/stories/polyphase/circuit/circuitnetwork.gif Hans Summers have used it in conjunction with a Tayloe detector for a 80 m receiver: http://hanssummers.com/images/stories/polyphase/circuit/circuittayloe.gif Look at his complete article here: http://hanssummers.com/polyphase.html Cheers, Magnus On 02/04/2016 12:13 AM, Bob Camp wrote: > Hi > > Back in the early days of multiplex transmission, frequency division multiplex was king. There were a > lot of systems. They used a variety of schemes to pack the baseband signals into sub 2 MHz sort of > arrangements. For quite a while the state of the art was to use various low frequency crystals to generate > the multitude of careers that spread out from audio up to maybe a MHz or two. > > As a result of this, there were a *LOT* of crystals made at weird low frequencies. Some of these systems lived > on well after the advent of digital multiplex systems. Once you have 400 miles of system A it’s easier to extend > it a “few more miles” than to re-do the whole thing. Spares for these systems were made at least into the 1990’s. > > While these are really cool looking parts (try a strobe on your 1 KHz bar …) they rarely are very stable. They are > more interesting as art than as frequency standards. > > Bob > >> On Feb 3, 2016, at 2:36 PM, Dave Brown <tractorb@ihug.co.nz> wrote: >> >> And many of these glass envelope crystals were made on very low frequencies- I have several below 20 kHz and one as low as 3 kHz in a B7G based envelope that is 4 inches long. >> http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~tractorb/3k1.JPG >> >> DaveB, NZ >> >> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Alan Melia" <alan.melia@btinternet.com> >> To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement" <time-nuts@febo.com> >> Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2016 6:30 AM >> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals >> >> >>> I think it was unlikely that that it was made "just to see where it would >>> come out" That is a flexural bar possibly an NT cut. 100KHz standards were >>> commonly made in this format. >>> The British GPO had a factory at Mill Hill in N. London making these in >>> tube-like (valve in UK) enclosures, IO GT and B7G. I have a number of unit >>> saved from the dumpster (skip in the UK).when the unit closed in the early >>> 60s. Remember there was a surge in telephones in this era and many of these >>> frequencies were for FDM carriers on trunk sytems. This is pre-synthersiser. >>> >>> Also many special quality tubes were made for VHF in B7G with two or three inch wires instead of pins to reduce the socket parasitics. so these were probably still around in Russian factories to produce components for the "Foxbat" etc. >>> >>> Alan >>> G3NYK >>> >>> >>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Philip Gladstone" <pjsg-timenuts@nospam.gladstonefamily.net> >>> To: <time-nuts@febo.com> >>> Sent: Wednesday, February 03, 2016 1:21 PM >>> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals >>> >>> >>>> I dug around in my junk box, and found this: >>>> >>>> https://plus.google.com/+PhilipGladstone/posts/JBNLMSq2rsE?pid=6247050011623528018&oid=115465617973526125523 >>>> >>>> This is (according to the markings) a 71.137 kHz crystal made in 1948. I >>>> suspect that they just measured the crystal after manufacture rather than >>>> actually trying to make a 71137Hz crystal.... >>>> >>>> After this discussion, I'm feeling the need to fire it up and see whether >>>> it still runs, and what the aging has done to the frequency.... >>>> >>>> Philip >>>> >>>> On 03/02/2016 07:11, Bob Camp wrote: >>>>> Hi >>>>> >>>>> There is actually a range of crystals shown in the pictures. The gold >>>>> plated 5 MHz >>>>> crystal is probably an overtone part. It could be fairly precise. The 25 >>>>> MHz part is >>>>> plated with something like silver. It probably is a *much* lower >>>>> precision part. There >>>>> likely are long stories that explain just why this or that package got >>>>> used in this >>>>> or that application. >>>>> >>>>> Bob >>>>> >>>>>> On Feb 2, 2016, at 10:04 PM, Jeremy Nichols <jn6wfo@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> The OP's picture looks very much like the crystals that HP's "Frequency >>>>>> and Time" division in Santa Clara (02 was their division number) used to >>>>>> manufacture back in the 1970s. My picture shows a 1 MHz crystal that HP >>>>>> used in the predecessor to the HP-105A (perhaps the 101A). >>>>>> >>>>>> Jeremy >>>>>> >>>>>> http://s323.photobucket.com/user/Jeremy5848/media/Miscellaneous/Crystal_1140587_zps0jxjpoal.jpg.html >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> On 2/2/2016 12:24 PM, Don Latham wrote: >>>>>>> You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected from >>>>>>> light, >>>>>>> thermal radiation, and emf. Won'drous things will happen if the >>>>>>> crystal and >>>>>>> its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd suggest >>>>>>> a foam >>>>>>> wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too. >>>>>>> Don >>>>>>> >>>>>>> iovane--- via time-nuts >>>>>>>> I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven, >>>>>>>> which >>>>>>>> worked >>>>>>>> as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's, >>>>>>>> and in my >>>>>>>> case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was housed >>>>>>>> (still >>>>>>>> is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass >>>>>>>> enclosure, a >>>>>>>> beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with >>>>>>>> lots of >>>>>>>> tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury >>>>>>>> thermometer in >>>>>>>> which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the >>>>>>>> capillary >>>>>>>> tube. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Antonio I8IOV >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Da: Bob Camp <kb8tq@n1k.org> >>>>>>>>> Data: 02/02/2016 13.15 >>>>>>>>> A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency >>>>>>>>> measurement"<time-nuts@febo.com> >>>>>>>>> Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Hi >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit, >>>>>>>>> putting it >>>>>>>> in a >>>>>>>>> socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part. >>>>>>>>> Even with >>>>>>>> fat pins >>>>>>>>> sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a >>>>>>>>> glass >>>>>>>> package crystal >>>>>>>>> and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has >>>>>>>>> a metal >>>>>>>> shield >>>>>>>>> you can (but sometimes don’t) ground. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Bob >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson <watsondaniel3@gmail.com> >>>>>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a >>>>>>>>>> project. >>>>>>>>>> Here are some pictures: >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for >>>>>>>>>> these? I >>>>>>>>>> read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a B7G >>>>>>>>>> mount, >>>>>>>>>> but I'm not sure if that type might work here. >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there >>>>>>>>>> any >>>>>>>>>> specific differences about crystals in this package that I should >>>>>>>>>> keep in >>>>>>>>>> mind? >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Thanks much, >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Dan W. >>>>>>>> >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com >>>> To unsubscribe, go to >>>> https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts >>>> and follow the instructions there. >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com >>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts >>> and follow the instructions there. >> >> _______________________________________________ >> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com >> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts >> and follow the instructions there. > > _______________________________________________ > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com > To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts > and follow the instructions there. >
E
EB4APL
Sat, Feb 6, 2016 1:18 PM

Here is a picture of one of those British made glass envelope crystals
with miniature 7 pin bases.  It is marked 62.500 KC/S and came from an
old Marconi broadcast B/W TV sync generator.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/3jtadg2c9rlc42n/Glass%20crystal.jpg?dl=0

Ignacio, EB4APL

On 03/02/2016 a las 22:41, Ian Stirling wrote:

On 02/02/2016 03:24 PM, Don Latham wrote:

You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected
from light,
thermal radiation, and emf.  Won'drous things will happen if the
crystal and
its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd
suggest a foam gator
wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too.

I have a 100 kHz glass "Crystal Unit" made by G.E.C., type JCF/193
with a serial number and sealed in a valve/tube with seven pins.
I removed it from my Eddystone EA12 that I bought from Tom Roberts,
G3YTO, SK 1985. It has a black shield with a spring inside at the top
so that it grips the base. The valve that produced 100 kHz markers for
dial calibration failed and I don't use the EA12 these days.
It will be interesting to see how stable it is and what the effect
of light and heat on it is when I start experimenting.

Ian, G4ICV, AB2GR


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Here is a picture of one of those British made glass envelope crystals with miniature 7 pin bases. It is marked 62.500 KC/S and came from an old Marconi broadcast B/W TV sync generator. https://www.dropbox.com/s/3jtadg2c9rlc42n/Glass%20crystal.jpg?dl=0 Ignacio, EB4APL On 03/02/2016 a las 22:41, Ian Stirling wrote: > On 02/02/2016 03:24 PM, Don Latham wrote: >> You have it right, iovane. At the least, they should be protected >> from light, >> thermal radiation, and emf. Won'drous things will happen if the >> crystal and >> its structure are subjected to radiation through the glass. I'd >> suggest a foam gator >> wrap in a tin can as a minimum. Put the oscillator cat in there too. > > I have a 100 kHz glass "Crystal Unit" made by G.E.C., type JCF/193 > with a serial number and sealed in a valve/tube with seven pins. > I removed it from my Eddystone EA12 that I bought from Tom Roberts, > G3YTO, SK 1985. It has a black shield with a spring inside at the top > so that it grips the base. The valve that produced 100 kHz markers for > dial calibration failed and I don't use the EA12 these days. > It will be interesting to see how stable it is and what the effect > of light and heat on it is when I start experimenting. > > Ian, G4ICV, AB2GR > -- > > _______________________________________________ > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com > To unsubscribe, go to > https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts > and follow the instructions there. > . > --- El software de antivirus Avast ha analizado este correo electrónico en busca de virus. https://www.avast.com/antivirus
AP
Alex Pummer
Sat, Mar 26, 2016 6:49 PM

I am perhaps to late now,I found the e-mail recently:
"

sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble.

Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a glass

package crystal

and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has a metal

shield

you can (but sometimes don’t)  ground.

Bob

"

the glass packed ones will have much better vacuum, therefore higher Q
I still have some KVG glass envelope crystals [116MHz overtone] from the
60 -ties
73
KJ6UHN
Alex

On 2/2/2016 2:37 PM, Bob Camp wrote:

Hi

I think you will find that the Russian versions were used without ovens for a long time. In the US, the only
use for the glass packages past the mid 1960’s was in ovens.

Bob

On Feb 2, 2016, at 1:43 PM, iovane--- via time-nuts time-nuts@febo.com wrote:

I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven, which worked
as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's, and in my
case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was housed (still
is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass enclosure, a
beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with lots of
tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury thermometer in
which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the capillary
tube.

Antonio I8IOV

Da: Bob Camp kb8tq@n1k.org
Data: 02/02/2016 13.15
A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"time-nuts@febo.com
Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

Hi

Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit, putting it

in a

socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part. Even with

fat pins

sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble.

Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a glass

package crystal

and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has a metal

shield

you can (but sometimes don’t)  ground.

Bob

On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson watsondaniel3@gmail.com wrote:

Hi,

I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a project.
Here are some pictures:

http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html

Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for these? I
read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a B7G mount,
but I'm not sure if that type might work here.

Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there any
specific differences about crystals in this package that I should keep in
mind?

Thanks much,

Dan W.


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No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2016.0.7497 / Virus Database: 4545/11889 - Release Date: 03/26/16

I am perhaps to late now,I found the e-mail recently: " > sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble. > > Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a glass package crystal > and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has a metal shield you can (but sometimes don’t) ground. Bob " the glass packed ones will have much better vacuum, therefore higher Q I still have some KVG glass envelope crystals [116MHz overtone] from the 60 -ties 73 KJ6UHN Alex On 2/2/2016 2:37 PM, Bob Camp wrote: > Hi > > I think you will find that the Russian versions were used without ovens for a long time. In the US, the only > use for the glass packages past the mid 1960’s was in ovens. > > Bob > > >> On Feb 2, 2016, at 1:43 PM, iovane--- via time-nuts <time-nuts@febo.com> wrote: >> >> I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven, which worked >> as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's, and in my >> case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was housed (still >> is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass enclosure, a >> beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with lots of >> tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury thermometer in >> which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the capillary >> tube. >> >> Antonio I8IOV >> >>> Da: Bob Camp <kb8tq@n1k.org> >>> Data: 02/02/2016 13.15 >>> A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"<time-nuts@febo.com> >>> Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals >>> >>> Hi >>> >>> Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit, putting it >> in a >>> socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part. Even with >> fat pins >>> sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble. >>> >>> Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a glass >> package crystal >>> and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has a metal >> shield >>> you can (but sometimes don’t) ground. >>> >>> Bob >>> >>> >>>> On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson <watsondaniel3@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a project. >>>> Here are some pictures: >>>> >>>> http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html >>>> >>>> Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for these? I >>>> read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a B7G mount, >>>> but I'm not sure if that type might work here. >>>> >>>> Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there any >>>> specific differences about crystals in this package that I should keep in >>>> mind? >>>> >>>> >>>> Thanks much, >>>> >>>> Dan W. >> >> _______________________________________________ >> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com >> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts >> and follow the instructions there. > _______________________________________________ > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com > To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts > and follow the instructions there. > > > ----- > No virus found in this message. > Checked by AVG - www.avg.com > Version: 2016.0.7497 / Virus Database: 4545/11889 - Release Date: 03/26/16
BC
Bob Camp
Sun, Mar 27, 2016 1:22 AM

Hi

On Mar 26, 2016, at 2:49 PM, Alex Pummer alex@pcscons.com wrote:

I am perhaps to late now,I found the e-mail recently:
"

sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble.

Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a glass

package crystal

and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has a metal

shield

you can (but sometimes don’t)  ground.

Bob

"

the glass packed ones will have much better vacuum, therefore higher Q
I still have some KVG glass envelope crystals [116MHz overtone] from the 60 -ties

That may have been true in the 1950’s but once modern cold weld packages came along it quickly
became a non-issue.  The Q dependance of crystals to atmosphere is a function of frequency. A
118 MHz crystal shows much less impact from a given level of “air” than something like a 2.5 MHz
5th overtone.

Bob

73
KJ6UHN
Alex

On 2/2/2016 2:37 PM, Bob Camp wrote:

Hi

I think you will find that the Russian versions were used without ovens for a long time. In the US, the only
use for the glass packages past the mid 1960’s was in ovens.

Bob

On Feb 2, 2016, at 1:43 PM, iovane--- via time-nuts time-nuts@febo.com wrote:

I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven, which worked
as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's, and in my
case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was housed (still
is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass enclosure, a
beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with lots of
tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury thermometer in
which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the capillary
tube.

Antonio I8IOV

Da: Bob Camp kb8tq@n1k.org
Data: 02/02/2016 13.15
A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"time-nuts@febo.com
Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

Hi

Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit, putting it

in a

socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part. Even with

fat pins

sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble.

Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a glass

package crystal

and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has a metal

shield

you can (but sometimes don’t)  ground.

Bob

On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson watsondaniel3@gmail.com wrote:

Hi,

I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a project.
Here are some pictures:

http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html

Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for these? I
read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a B7G mount,
but I'm not sure if that type might work here.

Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there any
specific differences about crystals in this package that I should keep in
mind?

Thanks much,

Dan W.


time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.


time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.


No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2016.0.7497 / Virus Database: 4545/11889 - Release Date: 03/26/16


time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.

Hi > On Mar 26, 2016, at 2:49 PM, Alex Pummer <alex@pcscons.com> wrote: > > I am perhaps to late now,I found the e-mail recently: > " >> sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble. >> >> Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a glass > > package crystal > >> and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has a metal > > shield > > you can (but sometimes don’t) ground. > > Bob > > > " > > > the glass packed ones will have much better vacuum, therefore higher Q > I still have some KVG glass envelope crystals [116MHz overtone] from the 60 -ties That may have been true in the 1950’s but once modern cold weld packages came along it quickly became a non-issue. The Q dependance of crystals to atmosphere is a function of frequency. A 118 MHz crystal shows much less impact from a given level of “air” than something like a 2.5 MHz 5th overtone. Bob > 73 > KJ6UHN > Alex > > On 2/2/2016 2:37 PM, Bob Camp wrote: >> Hi >> >> I think you will find that the Russian versions were used without ovens for a long time. In the US, the only >> use for the glass packages past the mid 1960’s was in ovens. >> >> Bob >> >> >>> On Feb 2, 2016, at 1:43 PM, iovane--- via time-nuts <time-nuts@febo.com> wrote: >>> >>> I think that these crystals were designed to be placed in an oven, which worked >>> as a shield too. I have a similar crystal made by Racal in the 60's, and in my >>> case it is fitted with the classic octal tube-type plug. It was housed (still >>> is) in a heavy massive shimmering chrome-plated cylindrical brass enclosure, a >>> beauty to see, It was the timebase of a tube-type synthesizer with lots of >>> tubes. Themperature control was achieved by means of a mercury thermometer in >>> which mercury actuated a contact when reaching a wire crossing the capillary >>> tube. >>> >>> Antonio I8IOV >>> >>>> Da: Bob Camp <kb8tq@n1k.org> >>>> Data: 02/02/2016 13.15 >>>> A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"<time-nuts@febo.com> >>>> Ogg: Re: [time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals >>>> >>>> Hi >>>> >>>> Since the 25 MHz crystal has already been soldered into a circuit, putting it >>> in a >>>> socket is probably not a real good idea. It’s also a leaded part. Even with >>> fat pins >>>> sockets can be an issue. With wire leads, you are asking for trouble. >>>> >>>> Functionally, there is little there is little difference between a glass >>> package crystal >>>> and a metal package. About the only real one is the obvious - one has a metal >>> shield >>>> you can (but sometimes don’t) ground. >>>> >>>> Bob >>>> >>>> >>>>> On Feb 1, 2016, at 9:58 PM, Daniel Watson <watsondaniel3@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> Hi, >>>>> >>>>> I purchased a pair of interesting glass envelope crystals for a project. >>>>> Here are some pictures: >>>>> >>>>> http://syncchannel.blogspot.com/2016/02/glass-envelope-quartz-crystals.html >>>>> >>>>> Does anyone have an idea about what mount/socket I should buy for these? I >>>>> read a previous thread on the list about Bliley crystals using a B7G mount, >>>>> but I'm not sure if that type might work here. >>>>> >>>>> Also, when building up a circuit to make these oscillate, are there any >>>>> specific differences about crystals in this package that I should keep in >>>>> mind? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Thanks much, >>>>> >>>>> Dan W. >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com >>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts >>> and follow the instructions there. >> _______________________________________________ >> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com >> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts >> and follow the instructions there. >> >> >> ----- >> No virus found in this message. >> Checked by AVG - www.avg.com >> Version: 2016.0.7497 / Virus Database: 4545/11889 - Release Date: 03/26/16 > > _______________________________________________ > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com > To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts > and follow the instructions there.