[time-nuts] Glass Envelope Quartz Crystals

Jeremy Nichols jn6wfo at gmail.com
Tue Feb 2 22:04:41 EST 2016


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 at n1k.org>
>>> Data: 02/02/2016 13.15
>>> A: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"<time-nuts at 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 at 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 at febo.com
>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>> and follow the instructions there.
>>
>>
>



More information about the time-nuts mailing list