Acousto-Optical Coherence Tomography (AOCT) is a variant of Acousto Optic Imaging (also called Ultrasound modulated Optical Tomography) that makes possible to get resolution along the ultrasound propagation axis \(z\). We present here new AOCT experimental results, and we study how the \(z\) resolution depends on time step between phase jumps \(T_\phi\), or on the correlation length \(\Delta z\). By working at low resolution, we perform a quantitative comparison of the \(z\) measurements with the theoretical Point Spread Function (PSF). We present also images recorded with different \(z\) resolution, and we qualitatively show how the image quality varies with \(T_\phi\), or \(\Delta z\).