I bought one mounted on a board (black solder resist, schematic approximately as 807's) and 5 unmounted (desoldered). I found I couldn't adjust the frequency at all (it settles to about 4Hz high in less than 2 minutes, vs a GPSDO). This seems to be because the adjustment pot - which is 200K in this example - doesn't seem to have the centre pin connected to the end, so it functions as a fixed 200k resistor,
Linking 2 pins of the pot (the two nearest the adjustment screw : the pin near the edge of the board is ground, though I guess that would work too) got me down to a +2Hz error with the pot at 0 ohms so a resistor change was necessary. 18k in parallel with R3 got it in range though it's at the low resistance (somewhat sensitive) end of the travel.
After adjustment to 0.08 Hz high it's drifted up to .15 Hz high in 2 days but is pretty solid there. It's in a small cardboard box full of polystyrene peanuts to let the voltage reference stabilise, heated by the oven and the linear regulator, which is supplied with 10V. However a couple of days to stabilise isn't much use for a portable instrument. This may just be settling out in the environment and after some time powered off (and probably abused mechanically). I'll have to see what it now achieves from cold.
After some thermal cycles and resets but no adjustment the frequency had increased to 10M + 0.19. However it's stuck there (about 5x10^-10 variation) ever since, despite another 12 hour cool/heat cycle, a brief interruption and 2-3 days on test. After cooling the oscillator is stable in a couple of minutes but the entire board and enclosure has to warm up before the voltage source is at temperature.
Very grateful for the schematic. Opaque solder resist is a crime

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Interested to see what people come up with for an improved pcb and reference.