Skip to main content
Din side Meny

Characterization of a GNSS-controlled reference clock

What we do:

We measure and analyze the performance of GNSS‑disciplined reference clocks. This includes:

·    Comparison against the national time standard (UTC(JV))
·    Long‑term measurements to assess stability and drift
·    Testing of holdover performance when the GNSS signal is lost

The instrument must have a 5 MHz or 10 MHz (sine/square) and/or 1 PPS output.

Measurements are normally performed with 24 hours of stabilization, followed by approximately 10 days of continuous operation with second‑by‑second data collection.

The result is a report describing the clock’s accuracy and performance characteristics.

Why characterization?

Precise time is essential in many sectors—from telecommunications and power distribution to research and finance. GNSS‑based clocks provide high precision, but their quality varies between models and operating environments.

Characterization provides:

·    Documented performance
·    Traceability to national and international time standards
·    Confidence that your systems operate as expected

Typical parameters we evaluate

·    Accuracy: Deviation from UTC(JV)
·    Stability: Short‑ and long‑term frequency variations
·    Holdover: How well the clock maintains time without a GNSS signal
·    Jitter and signal integrity: For applications with strict requirements

Contact information

Harald Hauglin

hha@justervesenet.no

Ofte stilte spørsmål om kalibrering

 

Contact form:

Fill in our contact form, and we will respond as quickly as possible.
Go to contact form