GPSDO

An overview of the GPSDO project

Building a GPS-Disciplined Oscillator (GPSDO)

Background and inspiration

A GPS-Disciplined Oscillator combines a local high-stability oscillator (typically an OCXO) with the long-term accuracy of GPS time.
Over the years, many excellent DIY versions have appeared; the two I learned the most from were:

My build followed Lars’ architecture most closely.


Hardware overview

  • OCXO: a NOS Isotemp oven-controlled oscillator sourced from AliExpress.
    To help with temperature stability, I designed and 3-D printed a small plastic thermal cover that prevents rapid cooling when the ambient changes.
  • GPS receiver: u-blox LEA-M8T timing module, chosen for its 1 PPS stability and access to raw timing data.
  • Controller: Arduino Nano, running firmware based on Lars’ control algorithm (time-interval counter with proportional-integral loop).
  • Power architecture: every functional block has its own 5 V LDO regulator to minimize coupling:
    • one for the GPS,
    • one for the OCXO,
    • one for the Arduino and DAC/PWM section.
  • Reference and tuning circuit:
    For the OCXO tuning voltage, I use a REF5050 precision 5.000 V reference feeding a fine trimming potentiometer.
    The control loop then applies a correction of a few tens of millivolts via two combined PWM outputs from the Arduino, summed and filtered to achieve ≈16-bit effective resolution.
    This allows microvolt-level steering of the OCXO frequency.

Loop architecture

Tbd.

Measurement results

tbd.

Power-supply noise and thermal tests.

tbd.

Integration with your lab reference system

tbd.

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