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- To: bowen@cs.buffalo.edu
- Subject: OE 3000A Handicounter Review
- From: bmork@opus-ovh.spk.wa.us (Brian)
- Date: Wed, 23 Mar 94 17:33:32 GMT
-
- Optoelectronics 3000A Product Review - September 1993
- Copyright (c) 93,94 Brian Mork -- "not to make money, but to keep it that
- way for others."
-
- >>> HISTORY
- June 19th of 1993, I distributed a product review of Optoelectron-
- ics' 3000A handicounter. It had bad dBm calculations. A 29 July
- distribution fixed these errors and the text was cleaned up in other
- ways. More complete input sensitivities were reported. This version
- includes subsequent perspective after use of OE's M1 handicounter (see
- the M1 product review of this same date -- it is a pared down version of
- the 3000A). Damien Thorn (Internet drdamien@delphi.com) wrote a non-tech-
- nical review article on several of OE's products (covering more why you'd
- want them and what to do with them once you own them) that appeared in
- the August 1993 issue of Nuts & Volts.
-
- >>> ABSTRACT
- A 10Hz-3GHz feature-laden counter/timer/frequency meter could be a good
- addition to your shack if you don't have the functionality yet. There are
- some disallowed configurations that give you less than you may think if
- you casually read the laundry list of features. Input specifications
- need more attention or at least acknowledgement of real-life problems.
-
- >>> CONSTRUCTION
- The case is an extruded U-channel of aluminum with a flat top plate and
- end plates. The end plates screw into the U-channel with four screws,
- one of which is a machine screw. This one is by the A input, apparently
- designed to provide a better "bite" into an interior copper shielding
- plate around the A input.
-
- A single 9.2cm x 12.6cm circuit board lies under the faceplate, directly
- mounting the three buttons and six slide switches, which, in turn, poke
- through the front plate. A piggyback (piggyfront?) board holds the LCD
- display. There are two main chips--the OE10 vaulted in Optoelectronics'
- marketing literature and an SC87C51. My 8751 is labeled M1.3000A 5.20.93
- VER 2.1 with a little sticky label. The two main chips and a transformer
- on the board have a white chalky substance around them as if they were
- hand soldered and the flux vapors weren't cleaned off. Hope it doesn't
- corrode. Probably 200 additional components, mostly surface mounted,
- also occupy the circuit board.
-
- The six batteries are stuck to the back shell (double sided tape?). The
- two battery wires terminate on the circuit board with a separable connec-
- tor. The batteries' weight and the solid aluminum case give the unit a
- solid feel. Neither the wall-wart charging unit or the 3000A itself have
- a charging light. For the extra resistor and LED, I would like one. Too
- many times I've had some master switch, wall switch or loose plug inad-
- vertently negate my effort to charge batteries. And when do you find
- out? When you needed the unit to be charged.
-
- There are three plastic sheets stuck on the external top and face of the
- unit. My top piece was peeling off slightly. The front bottom one was
- crooked enough to let Button 2 not bounce back up. Slight trimming fixed
- that. I can't tell if the white lettering is applied on top of the plas-
- tic or behind the plastic. I hope it's behind so that they don't wear
- off. All the aluminum is painted black --not drippy, but it has the ap-
- pearance of thick enamel. Personally, I would much rather have black
- anodized so there would be no possibility of chipping paint.
-
- >>> OWNER'S MANUAL
- It's five sheets of photocopied 8-1/2" x 11", printed in landscape mode
- and folded in half. It's short, but operation of the 3000A is easy, so
- maybe a lot isn't needed. I would propose inclusion of a few diagrams
- and tables rather than all linear text description. Included in the man-
- ual are:
-
- Features description............... 2 pages
- Specifications..................... 1 page
- Operation.......................... 2 pages
- Data Interface..................... 2 pages
- Block schematic.................... 2 pages
- Operation hints.................... 4 pages
- Battery & Power.................... 1 page
- Calibration........................ 1 page
- Warrantee.......................... 1 page
- Service & Return................... 1 page
-
- A loose sheet of paper describes how to turn on the backlight option.
-
- I wanted to know what I could plug into this meter. Nowhere in the specs
- or owner's manual are the max input ratings. After talking with the fac-
- tory (toll call is small compared to the purchase price, but still is
- annoying), I find the 1 Mohm inputs can handle a maximum on the order of
- 50 volts AC+DC. The Model 3000 (not the 3000A) specified 100V RMS as the
- maximum. Anyhow, I feel good about plugging in TTL.
-
- DON'T plug TTL into the inputs if the 50 ohm switch is selected! More
- subtly, be sure you *unplug* it before you slide the switch to the 50 ohm
- position. The same phone call revealed that the 50 ohm inputs handle a
- maximum of +15 dBm. That's 1.2 volts RMS in a 50-ohm system, correspond-
- ing to 3.4 volts Peak-to-Peak if the waveform is a sine wave. Another
- user was told by a factory technician that "a 5W HT connected to the
- counter input for a short time would not damage the counter." Five watts
- is about +37 dBm! Does the amount of time matter? The correct numbers
- need to be in an Owner's Manual, especially since the warranty excludes
- "damage to the input circuitry from the application of an excessive input
- signal."
-
- I would suggest making no direct electrical connections to the 50 ohm
- amps. Only antenna type inputs should be used when the 50 ohm amps are
- selected. I've wrapped an 8" wire (snake like) around cordless phone
- antennas, and that works ok, but even this would be *way* to much for a
- 100W HF transmitter. Be careful. Full scale bar graph ranges from 2 - 4
- mV, depending on the frequency. If you stay on scale, you're safe, but
- most of the valid input window is above "full scale." In the range 4 mV
- to approximately 1200 mV, you'll be increasing power "in the blind."
-
- >>> OPERATION
- Some non-obvious combinations of functions and inputs is the order of the
- day. This is kind of weird, but is intentional to give you the best sen-
- sitivity possible, using a number of specialized input amps.
-
- Turn it on, holding down a Button 2 if you want the optional backlight to
- come on. Button 3 selects the gate time (resolution). With a slide
- switch, you select either 1 Mohm (Hi-Z) or 50 ohm (Lo-Z) amplifiers.
-
- If you select Hi-Z inputs, Button 1 selects either/both A and B inputs.
- Button 2 rotates between FREQUENCY, PERIOD, INTERVAL, and RATIO. Input A
- measures only 10Hz - 50MHz, with sensitivity of a few tens of millivolts.
- Input B measures only 10Hz - 10MHz, with a sensitivity of better than ten
- millivolts.
-
- If you select Lo-Z inputs, a signal strength bar-graph indication auto-
- matically appears and you must select one of three input amps:
-
- Input A only, from 10MHz - 220MHz (0.3 to 5mV sensitivity)
- Input A only, from 10MHz - 880MHz (divide by 4 prescaler)
- Input B only, from 500MHz - 3000MHz (new amp, div by 16 prescaler)
-
- On one of OE's product literature flyers, they speak of a 1-200MHz input.
- A phone call confirmed that this range exists only as a typo on the pro-
- duct literature flyer.
-
- In parallel with all the above input selections, two switches let you
- operate in either of four modes. I'll call them modes 00, 01, 10, and
- 11, representing whether FILTER and CAPTURE, respectively, are off (0) or
- on (1).
-
- 00 (FILTER off, CAPTURE off) Operates as described above. This is
- the single mode of the original Model 3000. Meter shows updated
- values even if it's counting noise. Gate light blinks continuous-
- ly.
-
- 10 (FILTER on, CAPTURE off) PERIOD, INTERVAL and RATIO are disabled.
- Computer logic looks for meaningful oscillations, providing a new
- frequency value only if a legitimate count is acquired. A higher
- level of filtering can be selected by holding down Button 3 during
- power up.
-
- 11 (FILTER on, CAPTURE on) Same as mode 10 except nothing happens
- until you arm the system by pressing Button 2. Once you do this,
- the word "frequency" flashes on the display until a legitimate
- count is snagged. A three-memory buffer (the display plus two
- more) keeps previous values. They are referred to as X, A, and B.
- X contains the most recent, A the second most recent, and B the
- third most recent. When a fourth value is snagged, the value in B
- is lost.
-
- 01 (FILTER off, CAPTURE on) In this mode, no measurements are taken.
- Button 2 rotates between the three memories recorded in mode 11.
-
- >>> PRODUCT SUPPORT
- In some sense, there's not much to support. The meter either works or it
- doesn't. Operation is very straight forward. I don't call to harass
- service personnel and I *do* read the manuals first. I did call to find
- out about the input characteristics as discussed above and was, well, not
- impressed.
-
- Female answers and I ask for service or tech help. After 2 minutes, the
- line drops dead. I call back. Same female passes me on to Ray quickly
- this time. I ask Ray about input specs. He says that, yes indeed, that
- has been inadvertently left out of the manual. Stand by. Three minutes.
- Ray comes back with info. The 1 Mohm inputs are "plus 50 volt AC plus
- DC", the 50 ohm inputs are "plus 15 dBm." Yes, that's what I wanted!
- Follow up: What do you mean by 50v AC+DC?" Hmmm. He didn't know;
- that's what the engineer told him. Ok. Is it capacitively coupled?
- Uhh.. the inputs go right into a "MAR6 amplifier." Could you please send
- me a copy of just the front end prior to the MAR6 amps? Pause... "Well,
- there's a capacitor that goes to ground." Yes, that's the kind of info I
- want. What size? Maybe a pf or two? "It's a 50v electrolytic." Eeee
- wrong person. Would he send me just a copy of the front end schematic?
- "No, we don't have anything like that I could send you." Ok, well thanks
- anyhow. Bye.
-
- In retrospect, I should have asked for the engineer who was sourcing this
- information. Inputs are listed in the specifications as 1MHz, 30pf.
- This seems believable since it mimics a normal oscilloscope input. But
- are they AC or DC coupled? With what size, type & rating capacitor? I
- was hoping to use the INTERVAL or RATIO mode with Input B held open so I
- can count events on Input A. At Dayton a year back, I spoke with a man
- named Bill Owens who seemed to have a good handle on the company's histo-
- ry and the capability of the product line. I wish his knowledge was con-
- veyed better to potential buyers.
-
- >>> REAL LIFE
- I have two regimes of interest for which I want this counter. The first
- is modem and ultrasonic work in the KHz to 100 KHz range. The second is
- radio VFO work, requiring MHz up to GHz. I characterized the 3000A with
- a 20Hz - 1MHz function generator, my Yaesu 757GX/Vectronics VC300DLP com-
- bo, and a Hewlett-Packard VHF/UHF generator.
-
- --- low frequency ---
- For the less than 1MHz work, the Hi-Z inputs are used. I have a 1MHz
- TXCO standard in my shack that has an output floating on the back side of
- a little toroid transformer. It gives out approximately +-0.5v into my
- 500 Kohm load (3000A and oscilloscope in parallel). My 1MHz output shows
- up as a stable 6.00 Mhz on the 3000A. What?! Yes. Regardless of the
- filter selection (none, medium, or full), six megahertz kept being dis-
- played. The waveform was not symmetric, I'll give that much, but it was
- very stable and clean from other high frequency hash. It looked sort of
- like this:
-
- |\ |\ The waveform stayed the same regardless of
- 0 V___| -- | -- whether the 3000A was hooked up. The 3000A
- | | | | counted the same regardless of whether the
- -. .---. o'scope was hooked up. P-P voltage was 1.5v.
-
- The 1MHz output from my TXCO was a square wave ranging between 0 and 2
- volts. Regardless of the 3000A filter selection, it showed a frequency
- of 3.0 MHz. Another user working on a homebuilt oscillator also reports
- extreme sensitivity to harmonics. This harmonic sensitivity, combined
- with extreme sensitivity makes the instrument virtually useless when us-
- ing any frequency multiples in your project: you won't know which signal
- is being locked onto.
-
- I fired up a variable frequency / variable amplitude function generator
- and o'scope combination. The generator went to the scope with a BNC T-
- tap half way that plugged into the 3000A.
-
- Using the A input, I needed incredulously large amplitudes--WAY above the
- specified <20 mV. Using the B input was even worse. The procedure used
- was to start at about 100 mV and go down first. If a stable count held,
- I reduced the PP voltage until spuratic readings were obtained. If
- 100 mV was giving spuratic or known-to-be-wrong numbers, I turned the
- amplitude up until a stable reading was obtained. The resultant measured
- PP voltages (asterisks indicate I never was able to get a good count):
-
- Frequency Input A Input B
- --------- ----------- -------
- 20 Hz 2 V (0.78 VRMS) *
- 200 Hz 1 V *
- 350 Hz 0.6 V *
- 60 KHz 50 mV 4 V
- 500 KHz <10 mV 1 V
-
- Square wave counting was similar. For instance, 2 V PP was needed at
- 10 KHz to get a good count with Input A. In all cases, the scope showed
- clean signals with no high frequency hash. Testing at another ham's
- shack who had a fancy HP generator and scope yielded the same results
- within 10%. Stable operation of the Hi-Z input is mandatory to use the
- interval and period functions of the 3000A, and this condition does NOT
- seem to be met. I consider the non-frequency modes to be historical car-
- ry-overs from the product lines' 7226 counter heritage rather than useful
- features of OE's OE10 custom chip.
-
- I own a PK232 radio modem and decided to see if the meter was good enough
- to tune the audio tones. With full output from the PK232 (about 0.5v PP
- on the scope, giving 140mV RMS on a Fluke DVM good to 10KHz), I stuck the
- tones into Input A and Input B with Hi-Z amps selected. The 2200Hz tone
- showed as 2265+-5Hz (A) and 23KHz (B), respectively. The 1200Hz tone
- showed as 1820+-15 (A) and 31KHz (B), respectively. No, I did not adjust
- the PK232.
-
- --- high frequency ---
- My RF test goal was simple. How accurate is my 757GX VFO? Working near
- 10MHz, the Lo-Z A input (only one suitable for this measurement) has an
- advertised sensitivity of <5mV. With a 12" dangling wire near the coax
- out the back of the radio, the counter was dominated with a signal at
- approximately 104 MHz (103.9 FM?). Later tests 25 miles across town
- again showed that with a wire pigtail antenna, it was being dominated
- with this station. I bought an RS15-577B FM trap and put it in line.
- Now a 68 MHz interference dominates, probably the local Channel 4 TV
- station.
-
- I went back to the Hi-Z inputs. At this point I was trying to determine
- the electrical length of some coax. A 1/4 wavelength of coax is termi-
- nated with a short circuit, and fed in parallel with a 50 ohm load with a
- mid level RF power (see page 74 of the June 93 QST; the goal is to get a
- 1:1 SWR). The high current node at the terminator is the point I was
- trying to pickup RF with the 3000A. Twenty turns of perfboard wire
- around a pencil stepped up the voltage enough for the meter to register
- stable counts when the pickup coil was positioned near the end of the
- coax shorting wire loop.
-
- Characterization of the three 50-ohm amps with an HP generator showed
- solid frequency locks at these random check points:
-
- Fast Amp Middle Amp Slow Amp
- ---------------------- ---------------------- ----------------------
- 800MHz, -47dBm, 1.0mV 100MHz, -65dBm, 0.12mV 150MHz, -60dBm, 0.22mV
- 1000MHz, -43dBm, 1.6mV 450MHz, -54dBm, 0.45mV
-
- Attempts to do PERIOD, INTERVAL, and RATIO measurements were unsuccessful
- due to the skittish behavior of the Hi-Z inputs.
-
- >>> OPTIONS
- You can buy a precision (0.2 ppm vs 1.0 ppm) timebase for an extra $100.
- What used to be a $45 backlight option now seems to be a non-optional
- extra expense. September advertisements still quote the lower price for
- the standard model, but the sales personnel won't sell one that way.
-
- --- time base ---
- There are two reasons why I did not want to buy the precision time-base
- option. One is because a RATIO mode is provided and I already have a
- precision 10MHz TTL oscillator scavenged from an old LORAN navigation
- board. 10MHz also happens to be the maximum frequency Input B accepted
- in the ratio mode (all ratios are A/B). What a coincidence. Works for
- me!
-
- The second reason is simply that the 1ppm timebase is specified to age at
- a rate of 1ppm/year. A 0.2 ppm option would be degraded to the 1.0ppm
- option in only about 10 weeks. In any case, I usually don't need to know
- the last 2 Hz on a 10000000 Hz signal.
-
- --- backlight ---
- When it's on, I can hear a switching circuit bringing up a high voltage
- for the luminescent display. It turns off after 10 seconds of inactivity
- and comes on again when some button is pressed or frequency is acquired.
-
- It looks good. Worth $45? The native display is plenty readable and the
- extra light actually makes reading it harder from angles "above" the
- counter.
-
- >>> GOTCHAS
- The serial interface is unidirectional. You send it a CR and it sends
- back 10 digits and a decimal point, in ASCII, 2400bps, 8 bits, no parity,
- 1 stop bit. It only works in FREQ mode. It provides only the most re-
- cent number, with no indication of whether this is another sample or the
- same number it just sent you after your last request. The interface can
- sink 1.6mA and source 0.06 mA.
-
- Excellent amplifier sensitivity isn't everything. Sometimes it's even a
- burden. For decent counting, the signal you're monitoring must exceed
- the noise (combination of *all* other RF signals in the bandpass of the
- selected amp) floor by 10-15dB. Specified sensitivity ranges from -57dBm
- to -11dBm. The input amp is limited to +15dBm. Ambient noise, including
- FM stations hovers about -11dBm. Play with those numbers and you'll see
- that the window for a good count can be pretty small. Try to measure a
- cordless phone near your transmitter or computer monitor? Probably not.
- If you live near a broadcast station, good luck. I don't consider these
- numbers a design flaw given the intentionally wide frequency range of the
- amps, but it definitely affects your day-to-day operation.
-
- In Damien's review, he emphasizes the importance of a limited bandwidth
- antenna. Take this recommendation seriously. Wide range frequency cov-
- erage means susceptibility to noise. A bandwidth limiting antenna helps
- mitigate this problem.
-
- >>> SUMMARY
- The at-your-door price for a 3.5" x 5" circuit board seems a bit high,
- but the counter is specified to do what I need it to do, plus a few
- options. Resolving the skittish Hi-Z input problems is a must. The M1
- gets around this by simply not having multifunction capability. Paying
- the extra $100 for a 3000A with specified capabilities that in real life
- are marginally usable deserves a second thought.
-
- All models are available only direct from the manufacturer in Florida.
- Contact Optoelectronics: 5821 NE 14th Avenue, Ft Lauderdale, FL 33334.
- 800-327-5912 or 305-771-2050. FAX 305-771-2052. Makes you want to
- dial ..2051 and see who you get, doesn't it? :)
-
- 73, Brian Mork (Opus-OVH) ARO KA9SNF@wb7nnf.#ewa.wa.usa
- Internet BMORK@opus-ovh.spk.wa.us
- 6006-B Eaker, Fairchild, WA 99011
-
- ---
- Brian Mork UUCP bmork@opus-ovh.spk.wa.us / ARO ka9snf@wb7nnf.#ewa.wa.usa
- . .... . USMail 6006-B Eaker, Fairchild, WA 99O11
- ..... .. .V:509-244-3764 D:509-244-9260
-