JO
Jean-Louis Oneto
Tue, Nov 7, 2017 4:43 PM
Hi Ole,
I think that the long term undulation are caused by a (small) error in geodetic position of the antenna. The period should be a sidereal day (23:56...)
Have a good day,
Jean-Louis
Envoyé depuis mon appareil mobile Samsung.
-------- Message d'origine --------
De : Ole Petter Ronningen opronningen@gmail.com
Date :07/11/2017 15:15 (GMT+01:00)
A : Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement time-nuts@febo.com
Objet : Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
Hi all
Attached is a 24 hour plot of PPS out from a UBlox 6T against a hydrogen
maser. From 00:00 the bare receiver board was inside a polystyrene box
where it has soaked for many months, at 16:00 I removed the box exposing
the board to the airflow in the room, including AC. The box was left off
for the rest of the day.
The green trace is temperature in the lab. The "long term undulation" in
phase is normal, although I do not know the precise cause (multipath or
something else. I am reasonably sure it is not related to temperature in
the lab.
[image: Inline image 1])
Ole
On Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 6:06 PM, Denny Page denny@cococafe.com wrote:
[I hate finding unsent email in my folder :-]
Others may disagree, but I doubt that the type of small temperature
variation you are referring to has any meaningful effect on tracking. While
the datasheet for the M8T says that there can be "significant impact" to
the specifications at “extreme operating temperatures,” it gives the
operating temperature as -40 to +85 C. Simply said, if you can stand to be
in the same room/space with it, I think you are fine.
Of much greater interest would be the antenna and it’s placement. I’m
afraid I can’t specifically recommend a “good” antenna, but perhaps others
on the list can. For my EVK-M8T, I’m using the antenna that came with the
kit and it works very well. I haven’t tested other antennas with the M8T at
this time, but I do have a number of other devices with antennas that work
well. I also have a few antennas that work poorly with all the devices,
including the ones with which they came. Unfortunately pretty much all of
them lack sufficient identification markings to identify manufacture/model
info.
Regarding placement, I’ve found that in a restricted area even a few
inches can have a significant impact on the average number of satellites
and signal level. In my case, it’s associated with the single building
structure, but it sounds your case is even more restrictive. Although it
can be a very lengthy process, performing antenna surveys may help improve
your situation. For each location, you need to monitor the number of
satellites and signal level for 24 hours or more before determining the
relative merit of that location. Repeat… and repeat.. and repeat.
Determining the very best location for the antenna will likely require as
many antenna surveys as you have patience for. :)
Hope this helps.
Denny
On Nov 02, 2017, at 18:54, MLewis mlewis000@rogers.com wrote:
Earlier this week, I put the breakout board with my NEO-M8T into an
aluminum can. The can is split into a lower half and an upper half. The
lower half was insulated on its sides internally, but open to the upper
half, which wasn't insulated. The lower area contains the NEO-M8T on its
breakout board and its matching com breakout board.
In the unusual skyview/RF environment described below:
- LH was typically showing two or three green sats, with a min of none
and a max of five for very brief periods.
- The average dBc of the green sats was 22 dBc, with a max of 29 dBc.
- Two screen shots of LH from this time period show an Accu of 12 ns and
This morning, I insulated the inside of the upper half of the can, and
added insulation to seal the top of the lower area into a chamber that
contained the GPS module board & its com board. Since then, its run for
around ten hours, same weather as yesterday except more rain, ambient room
temperature wasn't measured but is definitely warmer. Since after around an
hour of running:
- LH has been showing between two and eight green sats, typically three
- Their average dBc is 30 dBc, with a max of 37 dBc.
- LH Accu is showing as 6 ns.
I have no idea what the temperature is inside the chamber.
As I write this, LH is showing three green sats, at 33, 34 and 35 dBc.
I expected a more stable internal TCXO in the GPS module, but I didn't
expect stronger signals. Although perhaps I should have, as the block
diagram for the NEO-M8T does show its TCXO pointing at a "Fractional N
Synthesizer" inside the UBX-M8030's "RF Block". It also shows a RTC Crystal
for a RTC inside the "Digital Block".
Is this coincidence or can reception improve with:
- a higher temperature module?
- a more stable module temperature?
I'm tempted to add some thermal mass (block of Al) to the top of the M8T
and a chunk of insulation on top of that.
Michael
p.s.
As I finish this, LH is showing five sats, 23, 30, 31, 32 & 34 dBc, Accu
On 01/11/2017 9:55 AM, MLewis wrote:
I had anticipated reception issues, which is why I went with the M8T
for its sensitivity, multi-constellation and it's a timing module so a good
PPS on a single sat - only to get surprised that my version didn't have GAL
enabled. But I didn't envision reception would be so bad that not having
GAL would be material.
I'm also too close to that tall building that is reflecting the sats
over the Bering Strait at me. It's a military computer site, which I
thought would be pretty tight on stray RF, but it has antennas. I asked a
friend who works there about my GPS issues and if RF from the site may be
influencing things. He hesitated, then said "'Yes'. That's all I can say."
For first power up I had obtained an active antenna for
multi-constellation and a pre-filter that "provides protection from near
frequency or strong harmonic interfering signals."
...
On 01/11/2017 8:45 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi
For NTP levels of accuracy Glonas is quite fine. Combining that with
get you a pretty good “time source” even under your extreme conditions.
Bob
On Oct 31, 2017, at 11:14 PM, MLewis mlewis000@rogers.com wrote:
I'm stuck with a near ground level antenna site (~16" above grade?),
with half a sky view (thankfully to the SSE), less some low blocking
buildings with regular mutlipath, plus multipath bouncing off a taller
building to the SE that bounces sats from the NW at me from low over the
Bering Strait. The building I'm in is concrete with flat steel under each
floor from the construction method. As I write this I'm down to two green
sats in LH.
A number of times a day, it will drop to one sat, and there's a few
dropouts a day where it goes to none of sufficient signal. How many times
and for how long varies by the day. It's worse when it's wet out, which it
is right now. If I lower the signal strength threshold, then I end up with
tons of multipath signals.
...
While I wrote this, LH was typically showing two or three green sats,
once up to five and once down to one. And I just hit a dropout... for a
minute and a half; the one remaining green sat went behind the corner of
the building's entrance canopy, then back out.
On 31/10/2017 10:30 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi
Under what conditions would you expect to loose GPS? I seem to be
do just fine sitting in an armchair here in the family room. That’s
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
Hi Ole,
I think that the long term undulation are caused by a (small) error in geodetic position of the antenna. The period should be a sidereal day (23:56...)
Have a good day,
Jean-Louis
Envoyé depuis mon appareil mobile Samsung.
-------- Message d'origine --------
De : Ole Petter Ronningen <opronningen@gmail.com>
Date :07/11/2017 15:15 (GMT+01:00)
A : Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <time-nuts@febo.com>
Objet : Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
Hi all
Attached is a 24 hour plot of PPS out from a UBlox 6T against a hydrogen
maser. From 00:00 the bare receiver board was inside a polystyrene box
where it has soaked for many months, at 16:00 I removed the box exposing
the board to the airflow in the room, including AC. The box was left off
for the rest of the day.
The green trace is temperature in the lab. The "long term undulation" in
phase is normal, although I do not know the precise cause (multipath or
something else. I am reasonably sure it is not related to temperature in
the lab.
[image: Inline image 1])
Ole
On Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 6:06 PM, Denny Page <denny@cococafe.com> wrote:
> [I hate finding unsent email in my folder :-]
>
> Others may disagree, but I doubt that the type of small temperature
> variation you are referring to has any meaningful effect on tracking. While
> the datasheet for the M8T says that there can be "significant impact" to
> the specifications at “extreme operating temperatures,” it gives the
> operating temperature as -40 to +85 C. Simply said, if you can stand to be
> in the same room/space with it, I think you are fine.
>
> Of much greater interest would be the antenna and it’s placement. I’m
> afraid I can’t specifically recommend a “good” antenna, but perhaps others
> on the list can. For my EVK-M8T, I’m using the antenna that came with the
> kit and it works very well. I haven’t tested other antennas with the M8T at
> this time, but I do have a number of other devices with antennas that work
> well. I also have a few antennas that work poorly with all the devices,
> including the ones with which they came. Unfortunately pretty much all of
> them lack sufficient identification markings to identify manufacture/model
> info.
>
> Regarding placement, I’ve found that in a restricted area even a few
> inches can have a significant impact on the average number of satellites
> and signal level. In my case, it’s associated with the single building
> structure, but it sounds your case is even more restrictive. Although it
> can be a very lengthy process, performing antenna surveys may help improve
> your situation. For each location, you need to monitor the number of
> satellites and signal level for 24 hours or more before determining the
> relative merit of that location. Repeat… and repeat.. and repeat.
> Determining the very best location for the antenna will likely require as
> many antenna surveys as you have patience for. :)
>
> Hope this helps.
>
> Denny
>
>
> > On Nov 02, 2017, at 18:54, MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
> >
> > Earlier this week, I put the breakout board with my NEO-M8T into an
> aluminum can. The can is split into a lower half and an upper half. The
> lower half was insulated on its sides internally, but open to the upper
> half, which wasn't insulated. The lower area contains the NEO-M8T on its
> breakout board and its matching com breakout board.
> >
> > In the unusual skyview/RF environment described below:
> > - LH was typically showing two or three green sats, with a min of none
> and a max of five for very brief periods.
> > - The average dBc of the green sats was 22 dBc, with a max of 29 dBc.
> > - Two screen shots of LH from this time period show an Accu of 12 ns and
> 33 ns.
> >
> > This morning, I insulated the inside of the upper half of the can, and
> added insulation to seal the top of the lower area into a chamber that
> contained the GPS module board & its com board. Since then, its run for
> around ten hours, same weather as yesterday except more rain, ambient room
> temperature wasn't measured but is definitely warmer. Since after around an
> hour of running:
> > - LH has been showing between two and eight green sats, typically three
> to five:
> > - Their average dBc is 30 dBc, with a max of 37 dBc.
> > - LH Accu is showing as 6 ns.
> >
> > I have no idea what the temperature is inside the chamber.
> >
> > As I write this, LH is showing three green sats, at 33, 34 and 35 dBc.
> >
> > I expected a more stable internal TCXO in the GPS module, but I didn't
> expect stronger signals. Although perhaps I should have, as the block
> diagram for the NEO-M8T does show its TCXO pointing at a "Fractional N
> Synthesizer" inside the UBX-M8030's "RF Block". It also shows a RTC Crystal
> for a RTC inside the "Digital Block".
> >
> > Is this coincidence or can reception improve with:
> > - a higher temperature module?
> > - a more stable module temperature?
> >
> > I'm tempted to add some thermal mass (block of Al) to the top of the M8T
> and a chunk of insulation on top of that.
> >
> > Michael
> >
> > p.s.
> > As I finish this, LH is showing five sats, 23, 30, 31, 32 & 34 dBc, Accu
> 6 ns
> >
> > On 01/11/2017 9:55 AM, MLewis wrote:
> >> I had anticipated reception issues, which is why I went with the M8T
> for its sensitivity, multi-constellation and it's a timing module so a good
> PPS on a single sat - only to get surprised that my version didn't have GAL
> enabled. But I didn't envision reception would be so bad that not having
> GAL would be material.
> >>
> >> I'm also too close to that tall building that is reflecting the sats
> over the Bering Strait at me. It's a military computer site, which I
> thought would be pretty tight on stray RF, but it has antennas. I asked a
> friend who works there about my GPS issues and if RF from the site may be
> influencing things. He hesitated, then said "'Yes'. That's all I can say."
> >> For first power up I had obtained an active antenna for
> multi-constellation and a pre-filter that "provides protection from near
> frequency or strong harmonic interfering signals."
> >> ...
> >>
> >> On 01/11/2017 8:45 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
> >>> Hi
> >>>
> >>> For NTP levels of accuracy Glonas is quite fine. Combining that with
> GPS should
> >>> get you a pretty good “time source” even under your extreme conditions.
> >>>
> >>> Bob
> >>>> On Oct 31, 2017, at 11:14 PM, MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> I'm stuck with a near ground level antenna site (~16" above grade?),
> with half a sky view (thankfully to the SSE), less some low blocking
> buildings with regular mutlipath, plus multipath bouncing off a taller
> building to the SE that bounces sats from the NW at me from low over the
> Bering Strait. The building I'm in is concrete with flat steel under each
> floor from the construction method. As I write this I'm down to two green
> sats in LH.
> >>>>
> >>>> A number of times a day, it will drop to one sat, and there's a few
> dropouts a day where it goes to none of sufficient signal. How many times
> and for how long varies by the day. It's worse when it's wet out, which it
> is right now. If I lower the signal strength threshold, then I end up with
> tons of multipath signals.
> >>>>
> >>>> ...
> >>>>
> >>>> While I wrote this, LH was typically showing two or three green sats,
> once up to five and once down to one. And I just hit a dropout... for a
> minute and a half; the one remaining green sat went behind the corner of
> the building's entrance canopy, then back out.
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> On 31/10/2017 10:30 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
> >>>>> Hi
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Under what conditions would you expect to loose GPS? I seem to be
> able to
> >>>>> do just fine sitting in an armchair here in the family room. That’s
> hardly a
> >>>>> fancy setup.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Bob
> >>>>>
> >>
> >> _______________________________________________
> >> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> >> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> >> and follow the instructions there.
> >>
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> > To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> > and follow the instructions there.
>
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
>
_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
OP
Ole Petter Ronningen
Tue, Nov 7, 2017 7:12 PM
Yes, I thought so too - but on the same antenna I have a couple of L1/L2
continously logging survey receivers; the position accuracy should be
within 5-10 mm. Unless I've messed something up with coordinate systems,
the position the UBlox thinks it has should be pretty good.
Ole
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 5:43 PM, Jean-Louis Oneto jl.oneto@free.fr wrote:
Hi Ole,
I think that the long term undulation are caused by a (small) error in
geodetic position of the antenna. The period should be a sidereal day
(23:56...)
Have a good day,
Jean-Louis
Envoyé depuis mon appareil mobile Samsung.
-------- Message d'origine --------
De : Ole Petter Ronningen opronningen@gmail.com
Date :07/11/2017 15:15 (GMT+01:00)
A : Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <
time-nuts@febo.com>
Objet : Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
Hi all
Attached is a 24 hour plot of PPS out from a UBlox 6T against a hydrogen
maser. From 00:00 the bare receiver board was inside a polystyrene box
where it has soaked for many months, at 16:00 I removed the box exposing
the board to the airflow in the room, including AC. The box was left off
for the rest of the day.
The green trace is temperature in the lab. The "long term undulation" in
phase is normal, although I do not know the precise cause (multipath or
something else. I am reasonably sure it is not related to temperature in
the lab.
[image: Inline image 1])
Ole
On Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 6:06 PM, Denny Page denny@cococafe.com wrote:
[I hate finding unsent email in my folder :-]
Others may disagree, but I doubt that the type of small temperature
variation you are referring to has any meaningful effect on tracking.
the datasheet for the M8T says that there can be "significant impact" to
the specifications at “extreme operating temperatures,” it gives the
operating temperature as -40 to +85 C. Simply said, if you can stand to
in the same room/space with it, I think you are fine.
Of much greater interest would be the antenna and it’s placement. I’m
afraid I can’t specifically recommend a “good” antenna, but perhaps
on the list can. For my EVK-M8T, I’m using the antenna that came with the
kit and it works very well. I haven’t tested other antennas with the M8T
this time, but I do have a number of other devices with antennas that
well. I also have a few antennas that work poorly with all the devices,
including the ones with which they came. Unfortunately pretty much all of
them lack sufficient identification markings to identify
info.
Regarding placement, I’ve found that in a restricted area even a few
inches can have a significant impact on the average number of satellites
and signal level. In my case, it’s associated with the single building
structure, but it sounds your case is even more restrictive. Although it
can be a very lengthy process, performing antenna surveys may help
your situation. For each location, you need to monitor the number of
satellites and signal level for 24 hours or more before determining the
relative merit of that location. Repeat… and repeat.. and repeat.
Determining the very best location for the antenna will likely require as
many antenna surveys as you have patience for. :)
Hope this helps.
Denny
On Nov 02, 2017, at 18:54, MLewis mlewis000@rogers.com wrote:
Earlier this week, I put the breakout board with my NEO-M8T into an
aluminum can. The can is split into a lower half and an upper half. The
lower half was insulated on its sides internally, but open to the upper
half, which wasn't insulated. The lower area contains the NEO-M8T on its
breakout board and its matching com breakout board.
In the unusual skyview/RF environment described below:
- LH was typically showing two or three green sats, with a min of none
and a max of five for very brief periods.
- The average dBc of the green sats was 22 dBc, with a max of 29 dBc.
- Two screen shots of LH from this time period show an Accu of 12 ns
This morning, I insulated the inside of the upper half of the can, and
added insulation to seal the top of the lower area into a chamber that
contained the GPS module board & its com board. Since then, its run for
around ten hours, same weather as yesterday except more rain, ambient
temperature wasn't measured but is definitely warmer. Since after around
- LH has been showing between two and eight green sats, typically three
- Their average dBc is 30 dBc, with a max of 37 dBc.
- LH Accu is showing as 6 ns.
I have no idea what the temperature is inside the chamber.
As I write this, LH is showing three green sats, at 33, 34 and 35 dBc.
I expected a more stable internal TCXO in the GPS module, but I didn't
expect stronger signals. Although perhaps I should have, as the block
diagram for the NEO-M8T does show its TCXO pointing at a "Fractional N
Synthesizer" inside the UBX-M8030's "RF Block". It also shows a RTC
for a RTC inside the "Digital Block".
Is this coincidence or can reception improve with:
- a higher temperature module?
- a more stable module temperature?
I'm tempted to add some thermal mass (block of Al) to the top of the
and a chunk of insulation on top of that.
Michael
p.s.
As I finish this, LH is showing five sats, 23, 30, 31, 32 & 34 dBc,
On 01/11/2017 9:55 AM, MLewis wrote:
I had anticipated reception issues, which is why I went with the M8T
for its sensitivity, multi-constellation and it's a timing module so a
PPS on a single sat - only to get surprised that my version didn't have
enabled. But I didn't envision reception would be so bad that not having
GAL would be material.
I'm also too close to that tall building that is reflecting the sats
over the Bering Strait at me. It's a military computer site, which I
thought would be pretty tight on stray RF, but it has antennas. I asked a
friend who works there about my GPS issues and if RF from the site may be
influencing things. He hesitated, then said "'Yes'. That's all I can
For first power up I had obtained an active antenna for
multi-constellation and a pre-filter that "provides protection from near
frequency or strong harmonic interfering signals."
...
On 01/11/2017 8:45 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi
For NTP levels of accuracy Glonas is quite fine. Combining that with
get you a pretty good “time source” even under your extreme
On Oct 31, 2017, at 11:14 PM, MLewis mlewis000@rogers.com wrote:
I'm stuck with a near ground level antenna site (~16" above grade?),
with half a sky view (thankfully to the SSE), less some low blocking
buildings with regular mutlipath, plus multipath bouncing off a taller
building to the SE that bounces sats from the NW at me from low over the
Bering Strait. The building I'm in is concrete with flat steel under each
floor from the construction method. As I write this I'm down to two green
sats in LH.
A number of times a day, it will drop to one sat, and there's a few
dropouts a day where it goes to none of sufficient signal. How many times
and for how long varies by the day. It's worse when it's wet out, which
is right now. If I lower the signal strength threshold, then I end up
tons of multipath signals.
...
While I wrote this, LH was typically showing two or three green
once up to five and once down to one. And I just hit a dropout... for a
minute and a half; the one remaining green sat went behind the corner of
the building's entrance canopy, then back out.
On 31/10/2017 10:30 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi
Under what conditions would you expect to loose GPS? I seem to be
do just fine sitting in an armchair here in the family room. That’s
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
Yes, I thought so too - but on the same antenna I have a couple of L1/L2
continously logging survey receivers; the position accuracy should be
within 5-10 mm. Unless I've messed something up with coordinate systems,
the position the UBlox thinks it has should be pretty good.
Ole
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 5:43 PM, Jean-Louis Oneto <jl.oneto@free.fr> wrote:
> Hi Ole,
> I think that the long term undulation are caused by a (small) error in
> geodetic position of the antenna. The period should be a sidereal day
> (23:56...)
> Have a good day,
> Jean-Louis
>
>
>
> Envoyé depuis mon appareil mobile Samsung.
>
> -------- Message d'origine --------
> De : Ole Petter Ronningen <opronningen@gmail.com>
> Date :07/11/2017 15:15 (GMT+01:00)
> A : Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <
> time-nuts@febo.com>
> Objet : Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
>
> Hi all
>
> Attached is a 24 hour plot of PPS out from a UBlox 6T against a hydrogen
> maser. From 00:00 the bare receiver board was inside a polystyrene box
> where it has soaked for many months, at 16:00 I removed the box exposing
> the board to the airflow in the room, including AC. The box was left off
> for the rest of the day.
>
> The green trace is temperature in the lab. The "long term undulation" in
> phase is normal, although I do not know the precise cause (multipath or
> something else. I am reasonably sure it is not related to temperature in
> the lab.
>
> [image: Inline image 1])
>
> Ole
>
> On Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 6:06 PM, Denny Page <denny@cococafe.com> wrote:
>
> > [I hate finding unsent email in my folder :-]
> >
> > Others may disagree, but I doubt that the type of small temperature
> > variation you are referring to has any meaningful effect on tracking.
> While
> > the datasheet for the M8T says that there can be "significant impact" to
> > the specifications at “extreme operating temperatures,” it gives the
> > operating temperature as -40 to +85 C. Simply said, if you can stand to
> be
> > in the same room/space with it, I think you are fine.
> >
> > Of much greater interest would be the antenna and it’s placement. I’m
> > afraid I can’t specifically recommend a “good” antenna, but perhaps
> others
> > on the list can. For my EVK-M8T, I’m using the antenna that came with the
> > kit and it works very well. I haven’t tested other antennas with the M8T
> at
> > this time, but I do have a number of other devices with antennas that
> work
> > well. I also have a few antennas that work poorly with all the devices,
> > including the ones with which they came. Unfortunately pretty much all of
> > them lack sufficient identification markings to identify
> manufacture/model
> > info.
> >
> > Regarding placement, I’ve found that in a restricted area even a few
> > inches can have a significant impact on the average number of satellites
> > and signal level. In my case, it’s associated with the single building
> > structure, but it sounds your case is even more restrictive. Although it
> > can be a very lengthy process, performing antenna surveys may help
> improve
> > your situation. For each location, you need to monitor the number of
> > satellites and signal level for 24 hours or more before determining the
> > relative merit of that location. Repeat… and repeat.. and repeat.
> > Determining the very best location for the antenna will likely require as
> > many antenna surveys as you have patience for. :)
> >
> > Hope this helps.
> >
> > Denny
> >
> >
> > > On Nov 02, 2017, at 18:54, MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > Earlier this week, I put the breakout board with my NEO-M8T into an
> > aluminum can. The can is split into a lower half and an upper half. The
> > lower half was insulated on its sides internally, but open to the upper
> > half, which wasn't insulated. The lower area contains the NEO-M8T on its
> > breakout board and its matching com breakout board.
> > >
> > > In the unusual skyview/RF environment described below:
> > > - LH was typically showing two or three green sats, with a min of none
> > and a max of five for very brief periods.
> > > - The average dBc of the green sats was 22 dBc, with a max of 29 dBc.
> > > - Two screen shots of LH from this time period show an Accu of 12 ns
> and
> > 33 ns.
> > >
> > > This morning, I insulated the inside of the upper half of the can, and
> > added insulation to seal the top of the lower area into a chamber that
> > contained the GPS module board & its com board. Since then, its run for
> > around ten hours, same weather as yesterday except more rain, ambient
> room
> > temperature wasn't measured but is definitely warmer. Since after around
> an
> > hour of running:
> > > - LH has been showing between two and eight green sats, typically three
> > to five:
> > > - Their average dBc is 30 dBc, with a max of 37 dBc.
> > > - LH Accu is showing as 6 ns.
> > >
> > > I have no idea what the temperature is inside the chamber.
> > >
> > > As I write this, LH is showing three green sats, at 33, 34 and 35 dBc.
> > >
> > > I expected a more stable internal TCXO in the GPS module, but I didn't
> > expect stronger signals. Although perhaps I should have, as the block
> > diagram for the NEO-M8T does show its TCXO pointing at a "Fractional N
> > Synthesizer" inside the UBX-M8030's "RF Block". It also shows a RTC
> Crystal
> > for a RTC inside the "Digital Block".
> > >
> > > Is this coincidence or can reception improve with:
> > > - a higher temperature module?
> > > - a more stable module temperature?
> > >
> > > I'm tempted to add some thermal mass (block of Al) to the top of the
> M8T
> > and a chunk of insulation on top of that.
> > >
> > > Michael
> > >
> > > p.s.
> > > As I finish this, LH is showing five sats, 23, 30, 31, 32 & 34 dBc,
> Accu
> > 6 ns
> > >
> > > On 01/11/2017 9:55 AM, MLewis wrote:
> > >> I had anticipated reception issues, which is why I went with the M8T
> > for its sensitivity, multi-constellation and it's a timing module so a
> good
> > PPS on a single sat - only to get surprised that my version didn't have
> GAL
> > enabled. But I didn't envision reception would be so bad that not having
> > GAL would be material.
> > >>
> > >> I'm also too close to that tall building that is reflecting the sats
> > over the Bering Strait at me. It's a military computer site, which I
> > thought would be pretty tight on stray RF, but it has antennas. I asked a
> > friend who works there about my GPS issues and if RF from the site may be
> > influencing things. He hesitated, then said "'Yes'. That's all I can
> say."
> > >> For first power up I had obtained an active antenna for
> > multi-constellation and a pre-filter that "provides protection from near
> > frequency or strong harmonic interfering signals."
> > >> ...
> > >>
> > >> On 01/11/2017 8:45 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
> > >>> Hi
> > >>>
> > >>> For NTP levels of accuracy Glonas is quite fine. Combining that with
> > GPS should
> > >>> get you a pretty good “time source” even under your extreme
> conditions.
> > >>>
> > >>> Bob
> > >>>> On Oct 31, 2017, at 11:14 PM, MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
> > >>>>
> > >>>> I'm stuck with a near ground level antenna site (~16" above grade?),
> > with half a sky view (thankfully to the SSE), less some low blocking
> > buildings with regular mutlipath, plus multipath bouncing off a taller
> > building to the SE that bounces sats from the NW at me from low over the
> > Bering Strait. The building I'm in is concrete with flat steel under each
> > floor from the construction method. As I write this I'm down to two green
> > sats in LH.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> A number of times a day, it will drop to one sat, and there's a few
> > dropouts a day where it goes to none of sufficient signal. How many times
> > and for how long varies by the day. It's worse when it's wet out, which
> it
> > is right now. If I lower the signal strength threshold, then I end up
> with
> > tons of multipath signals.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> ...
> > >>>>
> > >>>> While I wrote this, LH was typically showing two or three green
> sats,
> > once up to five and once down to one. And I just hit a dropout... for a
> > minute and a half; the one remaining green sat went behind the corner of
> > the building's entrance canopy, then back out.
> > >>>>
> > >>>>
> > >>>> On 31/10/2017 10:30 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
> > >>>>> Hi
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>> Under what conditions would you expect to loose GPS? I seem to be
> > able to
> > >>>>> do just fine sitting in an armchair here in the family room. That’s
> > hardly a
> > >>>>> fancy setup.
> > >>>>>
> > >>>>> Bob
> > >>>>>
> > >>
> > >> _______________________________________________
> > >> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> > >> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> > mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> > >> and follow the instructions there.
> > >>
> > >
> > > _______________________________________________
> > > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> > > To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> > mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> > > and follow the instructions there.
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> > To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> > mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> > and follow the instructions there.
> >
>
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
>
BC
Bob Camp
Tue, Nov 7, 2017 7:21 PM
Hi
If you go back into the NIST evaluations of various receiver modules ….. they don’t always
work best with the correct coordinates. Some have guessed there are residual math errors
in the devices. Others suggest the “radio side” may be at fault. Indeed varying susceptibility
to multipath might be the answer.
Bob
On Nov 7, 2017, at 2:12 PM, Ole Petter Ronningen opronningen@gmail.com wrote:
Yes, I thought so too - but on the same antenna I have a couple of L1/L2
continously logging survey receivers; the position accuracy should be
within 5-10 mm. Unless I've messed something up with coordinate systems,
the position the UBlox thinks it has should be pretty good.
Ole
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 5:43 PM, Jean-Louis Oneto jl.oneto@free.fr wrote:
Hi Ole,
I think that the long term undulation are caused by a (small) error in
geodetic position of the antenna. The period should be a sidereal day
(23:56...)
Have a good day,
Jean-Louis
Envoyé depuis mon appareil mobile Samsung.
-------- Message d'origine --------
De : Ole Petter Ronningen opronningen@gmail.com
Date :07/11/2017 15:15 (GMT+01:00)
A : Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <
time-nuts@febo.com>
Objet : Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
Hi all
Attached is a 24 hour plot of PPS out from a UBlox 6T against a hydrogen
maser. From 00:00 the bare receiver board was inside a polystyrene box
where it has soaked for many months, at 16:00 I removed the box exposing
the board to the airflow in the room, including AC. The box was left off
for the rest of the day.
The green trace is temperature in the lab. The "long term undulation" in
phase is normal, although I do not know the precise cause (multipath or
something else. I am reasonably sure it is not related to temperature in
the lab.
[image: Inline image 1])
Ole
On Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 6:06 PM, Denny Page denny@cococafe.com wrote:
[I hate finding unsent email in my folder :-]
Others may disagree, but I doubt that the type of small temperature
variation you are referring to has any meaningful effect on tracking.
the datasheet for the M8T says that there can be "significant impact" to
the specifications at “extreme operating temperatures,” it gives the
operating temperature as -40 to +85 C. Simply said, if you can stand to
in the same room/space with it, I think you are fine.
Of much greater interest would be the antenna and it’s placement. I’m
afraid I can’t specifically recommend a “good” antenna, but perhaps
on the list can. For my EVK-M8T, I’m using the antenna that came with the
kit and it works very well. I haven’t tested other antennas with the M8T
this time, but I do have a number of other devices with antennas that
well. I also have a few antennas that work poorly with all the devices,
including the ones with which they came. Unfortunately pretty much all of
them lack sufficient identification markings to identify
info.
Regarding placement, I’ve found that in a restricted area even a few
inches can have a significant impact on the average number of satellites
and signal level. In my case, it’s associated with the single building
structure, but it sounds your case is even more restrictive. Although it
can be a very lengthy process, performing antenna surveys may help
your situation. For each location, you need to monitor the number of
satellites and signal level for 24 hours or more before determining the
relative merit of that location. Repeat… and repeat.. and repeat.
Determining the very best location for the antenna will likely require as
many antenna surveys as you have patience for. :)
Hope this helps.
Denny
On Nov 02, 2017, at 18:54, MLewis mlewis000@rogers.com wrote:
Earlier this week, I put the breakout board with my NEO-M8T into an
aluminum can. The can is split into a lower half and an upper half. The
lower half was insulated on its sides internally, but open to the upper
half, which wasn't insulated. The lower area contains the NEO-M8T on its
breakout board and its matching com breakout board.
In the unusual skyview/RF environment described below:
- LH was typically showing two or three green sats, with a min of none
and a max of five for very brief periods.
- The average dBc of the green sats was 22 dBc, with a max of 29 dBc.
- Two screen shots of LH from this time period show an Accu of 12 ns
This morning, I insulated the inside of the upper half of the can, and
added insulation to seal the top of the lower area into a chamber that
contained the GPS module board & its com board. Since then, its run for
around ten hours, same weather as yesterday except more rain, ambient
temperature wasn't measured but is definitely warmer. Since after around
- LH has been showing between two and eight green sats, typically three
- Their average dBc is 30 dBc, with a max of 37 dBc.
- LH Accu is showing as 6 ns.
I have no idea what the temperature is inside the chamber.
As I write this, LH is showing three green sats, at 33, 34 and 35 dBc.
I expected a more stable internal TCXO in the GPS module, but I didn't
expect stronger signals. Although perhaps I should have, as the block
diagram for the NEO-M8T does show its TCXO pointing at a "Fractional N
Synthesizer" inside the UBX-M8030's "RF Block". It also shows a RTC
for a RTC inside the "Digital Block".
Is this coincidence or can reception improve with:
- a higher temperature module?
- a more stable module temperature?
I'm tempted to add some thermal mass (block of Al) to the top of the
and a chunk of insulation on top of that.
Michael
p.s.
As I finish this, LH is showing five sats, 23, 30, 31, 32 & 34 dBc,
On 01/11/2017 9:55 AM, MLewis wrote:
I had anticipated reception issues, which is why I went with the M8T
for its sensitivity, multi-constellation and it's a timing module so a
PPS on a single sat - only to get surprised that my version didn't have
enabled. But I didn't envision reception would be so bad that not having
GAL would be material.
I'm also too close to that tall building that is reflecting the sats
over the Bering Strait at me. It's a military computer site, which I
thought would be pretty tight on stray RF, but it has antennas. I asked a
friend who works there about my GPS issues and if RF from the site may be
influencing things. He hesitated, then said "'Yes'. That's all I can
For first power up I had obtained an active antenna for
multi-constellation and a pre-filter that "provides protection from near
frequency or strong harmonic interfering signals."
...
On 01/11/2017 8:45 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi
For NTP levels of accuracy Glonas is quite fine. Combining that with
get you a pretty good “time source” even under your extreme
On Oct 31, 2017, at 11:14 PM, MLewis mlewis000@rogers.com wrote:
I'm stuck with a near ground level antenna site (~16" above grade?),
with half a sky view (thankfully to the SSE), less some low blocking
buildings with regular mutlipath, plus multipath bouncing off a taller
building to the SE that bounces sats from the NW at me from low over the
Bering Strait. The building I'm in is concrete with flat steel under each
floor from the construction method. As I write this I'm down to two green
sats in LH.
A number of times a day, it will drop to one sat, and there's a few
dropouts a day where it goes to none of sufficient signal. How many times
and for how long varies by the day. It's worse when it's wet out, which
is right now. If I lower the signal strength threshold, then I end up
tons of multipath signals.
...
While I wrote this, LH was typically showing two or three green
once up to five and once down to one. And I just hit a dropout... for a
minute and a half; the one remaining green sat went behind the corner of
the building's entrance canopy, then back out.
On 31/10/2017 10:30 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi
Under what conditions would you expect to loose GPS? I seem to be
do just fine sitting in an armchair here in the family room. That’s
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
Hi
If you go back into the NIST evaluations of various receiver modules ….. they don’t always
work best with the correct coordinates. Some have guessed there are residual math errors
in the devices. Others suggest the “radio side” may be at fault. Indeed varying susceptibility
to multipath *might* be the answer.
Bob
> On Nov 7, 2017, at 2:12 PM, Ole Petter Ronningen <opronningen@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Yes, I thought so too - but on the same antenna I have a couple of L1/L2
> continously logging survey receivers; the position accuracy should be
> within 5-10 mm. Unless I've messed something up with coordinate systems,
> the position the UBlox thinks it has should be pretty good.
>
> Ole
>
> On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 5:43 PM, Jean-Louis Oneto <jl.oneto@free.fr> wrote:
>
>> Hi Ole,
>> I think that the long term undulation are caused by a (small) error in
>> geodetic position of the antenna. The period should be a sidereal day
>> (23:56...)
>> Have a good day,
>> Jean-Louis
>>
>>
>>
>> Envoyé depuis mon appareil mobile Samsung.
>>
>> -------- Message d'origine --------
>> De : Ole Petter Ronningen <opronningen@gmail.com>
>> Date :07/11/2017 15:15 (GMT+01:00)
>> A : Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <
>> time-nuts@febo.com>
>> Objet : Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
>>
>> Hi all
>>
>> Attached is a 24 hour plot of PPS out from a UBlox 6T against a hydrogen
>> maser. From 00:00 the bare receiver board was inside a polystyrene box
>> where it has soaked for many months, at 16:00 I removed the box exposing
>> the board to the airflow in the room, including AC. The box was left off
>> for the rest of the day.
>>
>> The green trace is temperature in the lab. The "long term undulation" in
>> phase is normal, although I do not know the precise cause (multipath or
>> something else. I am reasonably sure it is not related to temperature in
>> the lab.
>>
>> [image: Inline image 1])
>>
>> Ole
>>
>> On Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 6:06 PM, Denny Page <denny@cococafe.com> wrote:
>>
>>> [I hate finding unsent email in my folder :-]
>>>
>>> Others may disagree, but I doubt that the type of small temperature
>>> variation you are referring to has any meaningful effect on tracking.
>> While
>>> the datasheet for the M8T says that there can be "significant impact" to
>>> the specifications at “extreme operating temperatures,” it gives the
>>> operating temperature as -40 to +85 C. Simply said, if you can stand to
>> be
>>> in the same room/space with it, I think you are fine.
>>>
>>> Of much greater interest would be the antenna and it’s placement. I’m
>>> afraid I can’t specifically recommend a “good” antenna, but perhaps
>> others
>>> on the list can. For my EVK-M8T, I’m using the antenna that came with the
>>> kit and it works very well. I haven’t tested other antennas with the M8T
>> at
>>> this time, but I do have a number of other devices with antennas that
>> work
>>> well. I also have a few antennas that work poorly with all the devices,
>>> including the ones with which they came. Unfortunately pretty much all of
>>> them lack sufficient identification markings to identify
>> manufacture/model
>>> info.
>>>
>>> Regarding placement, I’ve found that in a restricted area even a few
>>> inches can have a significant impact on the average number of satellites
>>> and signal level. In my case, it’s associated with the single building
>>> structure, but it sounds your case is even more restrictive. Although it
>>> can be a very lengthy process, performing antenna surveys may help
>> improve
>>> your situation. For each location, you need to monitor the number of
>>> satellites and signal level for 24 hours or more before determining the
>>> relative merit of that location. Repeat… and repeat.. and repeat.
>>> Determining the very best location for the antenna will likely require as
>>> many antenna surveys as you have patience for. :)
>>>
>>> Hope this helps.
>>>
>>> Denny
>>>
>>>
>>>> On Nov 02, 2017, at 18:54, MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Earlier this week, I put the breakout board with my NEO-M8T into an
>>> aluminum can. The can is split into a lower half and an upper half. The
>>> lower half was insulated on its sides internally, but open to the upper
>>> half, which wasn't insulated. The lower area contains the NEO-M8T on its
>>> breakout board and its matching com breakout board.
>>>>
>>>> In the unusual skyview/RF environment described below:
>>>> - LH was typically showing two or three green sats, with a min of none
>>> and a max of five for very brief periods.
>>>> - The average dBc of the green sats was 22 dBc, with a max of 29 dBc.
>>>> - Two screen shots of LH from this time period show an Accu of 12 ns
>> and
>>> 33 ns.
>>>>
>>>> This morning, I insulated the inside of the upper half of the can, and
>>> added insulation to seal the top of the lower area into a chamber that
>>> contained the GPS module board & its com board. Since then, its run for
>>> around ten hours, same weather as yesterday except more rain, ambient
>> room
>>> temperature wasn't measured but is definitely warmer. Since after around
>> an
>>> hour of running:
>>>> - LH has been showing between two and eight green sats, typically three
>>> to five:
>>>> - Their average dBc is 30 dBc, with a max of 37 dBc.
>>>> - LH Accu is showing as 6 ns.
>>>>
>>>> I have no idea what the temperature is inside the chamber.
>>>>
>>>> As I write this, LH is showing three green sats, at 33, 34 and 35 dBc.
>>>>
>>>> I expected a more stable internal TCXO in the GPS module, but I didn't
>>> expect stronger signals. Although perhaps I should have, as the block
>>> diagram for the NEO-M8T does show its TCXO pointing at a "Fractional N
>>> Synthesizer" inside the UBX-M8030's "RF Block". It also shows a RTC
>> Crystal
>>> for a RTC inside the "Digital Block".
>>>>
>>>> Is this coincidence or can reception improve with:
>>>> - a higher temperature module?
>>>> - a more stable module temperature?
>>>>
>>>> I'm tempted to add some thermal mass (block of Al) to the top of the
>> M8T
>>> and a chunk of insulation on top of that.
>>>>
>>>> Michael
>>>>
>>>> p.s.
>>>> As I finish this, LH is showing five sats, 23, 30, 31, 32 & 34 dBc,
>> Accu
>>> 6 ns
>>>>
>>>> On 01/11/2017 9:55 AM, MLewis wrote:
>>>>> I had anticipated reception issues, which is why I went with the M8T
>>> for its sensitivity, multi-constellation and it's a timing module so a
>> good
>>> PPS on a single sat - only to get surprised that my version didn't have
>> GAL
>>> enabled. But I didn't envision reception would be so bad that not having
>>> GAL would be material.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm also too close to that tall building that is reflecting the sats
>>> over the Bering Strait at me. It's a military computer site, which I
>>> thought would be pretty tight on stray RF, but it has antennas. I asked a
>>> friend who works there about my GPS issues and if RF from the site may be
>>> influencing things. He hesitated, then said "'Yes'. That's all I can
>> say."
>>>>> For first power up I had obtained an active antenna for
>>> multi-constellation and a pre-filter that "provides protection from near
>>> frequency or strong harmonic interfering signals."
>>>>> ...
>>>>>
>>>>> On 01/11/2017 8:45 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
>>>>>> Hi
>>>>>>
>>>>>> For NTP levels of accuracy Glonas is quite fine. Combining that with
>>> GPS should
>>>>>> get you a pretty good “time source” even under your extreme
>> conditions.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Bob
>>>>>>> On Oct 31, 2017, at 11:14 PM, MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I'm stuck with a near ground level antenna site (~16" above grade?),
>>> with half a sky view (thankfully to the SSE), less some low blocking
>>> buildings with regular mutlipath, plus multipath bouncing off a taller
>>> building to the SE that bounces sats from the NW at me from low over the
>>> Bering Strait. The building I'm in is concrete with flat steel under each
>>> floor from the construction method. As I write this I'm down to two green
>>> sats in LH.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> A number of times a day, it will drop to one sat, and there's a few
>>> dropouts a day where it goes to none of sufficient signal. How many times
>>> and for how long varies by the day. It's worse when it's wet out, which
>> it
>>> is right now. If I lower the signal strength threshold, then I end up
>> with
>>> tons of multipath signals.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> ...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> While I wrote this, LH was typically showing two or three green
>> sats,
>>> once up to five and once down to one. And I just hit a dropout... for a
>>> minute and a half; the one remaining green sat went behind the corner of
>>> the building's entrance canopy, then back out.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On 31/10/2017 10:30 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
>>>>>>>> Hi
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Under what conditions would you expect to loose GPS? I seem to be
>>> able to
>>>>>>>> do just fine sitting in an armchair here in the family room. That’s
>>> hardly a
>>>>>>>> fancy setup.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Bob
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>>>>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
>>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>>>>> and follow the instructions there.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>>>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
>>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>>>> and follow the instructions there.
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
>>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>>> and follow the instructions there.
>>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>> and follow the instructions there.
>> _______________________________________________
>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>> and follow the instructions there.
>>
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
LW
Lars Walenius
Tue, Nov 7, 2017 8:32 PM
Hi all,
If I look on the NIST database for the last days it seems to be a daily variation of about 8-10ns. Could this be for the same reason as Ole’s variation? Is the daily variations due to not perfect ionosphere correction? Can you get much better than the data in the NIST database for an ordinary timing receiver like the LEA-6T?
https://www.nist.gov/pml/time-and-frequency-division/services/gps-data-archive
Another question: If You have an error in the surveyed position of say 3meters and you receive all of the available satellites in all directions how much will this really affect your timing?
Sorry for all the silly questions.
Lars
Från: time-nuts time-nuts-bounces@febo.com för Bob Camp kb8tq@n1k.org
Skickat: Tuesday, November 7, 2017 8:21:44 PM
Till: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
Ämne: Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
Hi
If you go back into the NIST evaluations of various receiver modules ….. they don’t always
work best with the correct coordinates. Some have guessed there are residual math errors
in the devices. Others suggest the “radio side” may be at fault. Indeed varying susceptibility
to multipath might be the answer.
Bob
On Nov 7, 2017, at 2:12 PM, Ole Petter Ronningen opronningen@gmail.com wrote:
Yes, I thought so too - but on the same antenna I have a couple of L1/L2
continously logging survey receivers; the position accuracy should be
within 5-10 mm. Unless I've messed something up with coordinate systems,
the position the UBlox thinks it has should be pretty good.
Ole
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 5:43 PM, Jean-Louis Oneto jl.oneto@free.fr wrote:
Hi Ole,
I think that the long term undulation are caused by a (small) error in
geodetic position of the antenna. The period should be a sidereal day
(23:56...)
Have a good day,
Jean-Louis
Envoyé depuis mon appareil mobile Samsung.
-------- Message d'origine --------
De : Ole Petter Ronningen opronningen@gmail.com
Date :07/11/2017 15:15 (GMT+01:00)
A : Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <
time-nuts@febo.com>
Objet : Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
Hi all
Attached is a 24 hour plot of PPS out from a UBlox 6T against a hydrogen
maser. From 00:00 the bare receiver board was inside a polystyrene box
where it has soaked for many months, at 16:00 I removed the box exposing
the board to the airflow in the room, including AC. The box was left off
for the rest of the day.
The green trace is temperature in the lab. The "long term undulation" in
phase is normal, although I do not know the precise cause (multipath or
something else. I am reasonably sure it is not related to temperature in
the lab.
[image: Inline image 1])
Ole
On Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 6:06 PM, Denny Page denny@cococafe.com wrote:
[I hate finding unsent email in my folder :-]
Others may disagree, but I doubt that the type of small temperature
variation you are referring to has any meaningful effect on tracking.
the datasheet for the M8T says that there can be "significant impact" to
the specifications at “extreme operating temperatures,” it gives the
operating temperature as -40 to +85 C. Simply said, if you can stand to
in the same room/space with it, I think you are fine.
Of much greater interest would be the antenna and it’s placement. I’m
afraid I can’t specifically recommend a “good” antenna, but perhaps
on the list can. For my EVK-M8T, I’m using the antenna that came with the
kit and it works very well. I haven’t tested other antennas with the M8T
this time, but I do have a number of other devices with antennas that
well. I also have a few antennas that work poorly with all the devices,
including the ones with which they came. Unfortunately pretty much all of
them lack sufficient identification markings to identify
info.
Regarding placement, I’ve found that in a restricted area even a few
inches can have a significant impact on the average number of satellites
and signal level. In my case, it’s associated with the single building
structure, but it sounds your case is even more restrictive. Although it
can be a very lengthy process, performing antenna surveys may help
your situation. For each location, you need to monitor the number of
satellites and signal level for 24 hours or more before determining the
relative merit of that location. Repeat… and repeat.. and repeat.
Determining the very best location for the antenna will likely require as
many antenna surveys as you have patience for. :)
Hope this helps.
Denny
On Nov 02, 2017, at 18:54, MLewis mlewis000@rogers.com wrote:
Earlier this week, I put the breakout board with my NEO-M8T into an
aluminum can. The can is split into a lower half and an upper half. The
lower half was insulated on its sides internally, but open to the upper
half, which wasn't insulated. The lower area contains the NEO-M8T on its
breakout board and its matching com breakout board.
In the unusual skyview/RF environment described below:
- LH was typically showing two or three green sats, with a min of none
and a max of five for very brief periods.
- The average dBc of the green sats was 22 dBc, with a max of 29 dBc.
- Two screen shots of LH from this time period show an Accu of 12 ns
This morning, I insulated the inside of the upper half of the can, and
added insulation to seal the top of the lower area into a chamber that
contained the GPS module board & its com board. Since then, its run for
around ten hours, same weather as yesterday except more rain, ambient
temperature wasn't measured but is definitely warmer. Since after around
- LH has been showing between two and eight green sats, typically three
- Their average dBc is 30 dBc, with a max of 37 dBc.
- LH Accu is showing as 6 ns.
I have no idea what the temperature is inside the chamber.
As I write this, LH is showing three green sats, at 33, 34 and 35 dBc.
I expected a more stable internal TCXO in the GPS module, but I didn't
expect stronger signals. Although perhaps I should have, as the block
diagram for the NEO-M8T does show its TCXO pointing at a "Fractional N
Synthesizer" inside the UBX-M8030's "RF Block". It also shows a RTC
for a RTC inside the "Digital Block".
Is this coincidence or can reception improve with:
- a higher temperature module?
- a more stable module temperature?
I'm tempted to add some thermal mass (block of Al) to the top of the
and a chunk of insulation on top of that.
Michael
p.s.
As I finish this, LH is showing five sats, 23, 30, 31, 32 & 34 dBc,
On 01/11/2017 9:55 AM, MLewis wrote:
I had anticipated reception issues, which is why I went with the M8T
for its sensitivity, multi-constellation and it's a timing module so a
PPS on a single sat - only to get surprised that my version didn't have
enabled. But I didn't envision reception would be so bad that not having
GAL would be material.
I'm also too close to that tall building that is reflecting the sats
over the Bering Strait at me. It's a military computer site, which I
thought would be pretty tight on stray RF, but it has antennas. I asked a
friend who works there about my GPS issues and if RF from the site may be
influencing things. He hesitated, then said "'Yes'. That's all I can
For first power up I had obtained an active antenna for
multi-constellation and a pre-filter that "provides protection from near
frequency or strong harmonic interfering signals."
...
On 01/11/2017 8:45 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi
For NTP levels of accuracy Glonas is quite fine. Combining that with
get you a pretty good “time source” even under your extreme
On Oct 31, 2017, at 11:14 PM, MLewis mlewis000@rogers.com wrote:
I'm stuck with a near ground level antenna site (~16" above grade?),
with half a sky view (thankfully to the SSE), less some low blocking
buildings with regular mutlipath, plus multipath bouncing off a taller
building to the SE that bounces sats from the NW at me from low over the
Bering Strait. The building I'm in is concrete with flat steel under each
floor from the construction method. As I write this I'm down to two green
sats in LH.
A number of times a day, it will drop to one sat, and there's a few
dropouts a day where it goes to none of sufficient signal. How many times
and for how long varies by the day. It's worse when it's wet out, which
is right now. If I lower the signal strength threshold, then I end up
tons of multipath signals.
...
While I wrote this, LH was typically showing two or three green
once up to five and once down to one. And I just hit a dropout... for a
minute and a half; the one remaining green sat went behind the corner of
the building's entrance canopy, then back out.
On 31/10/2017 10:30 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi
Under what conditions would you expect to loose GPS? I seem to be
do just fine sitting in an armchair here in the family room. That’s
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
Hi all,
If I look on the NIST database for the last days it seems to be a daily variation of about 8-10ns. Could this be for the same reason as Ole’s variation? Is the daily variations due to not perfect ionosphere correction? Can you get much better than the data in the NIST database for an ordinary timing receiver like the LEA-6T?
https://www.nist.gov/pml/time-and-frequency-division/services/gps-data-archive
Another question: If You have an error in the surveyed position of say 3meters and you receive all of the available satellites in all directions how much will this really affect your timing?
Sorry for all the silly questions.
Lars
________________________________
Från: time-nuts <time-nuts-bounces@febo.com> för Bob Camp <kb8tq@n1k.org>
Skickat: Tuesday, November 7, 2017 8:21:44 PM
Till: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
Ämne: Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
Hi
If you go back into the NIST evaluations of various receiver modules ….. they don’t always
work best with the correct coordinates. Some have guessed there are residual math errors
in the devices. Others suggest the “radio side” may be at fault. Indeed varying susceptibility
to multipath *might* be the answer.
Bob
> On Nov 7, 2017, at 2:12 PM, Ole Petter Ronningen <opronningen@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Yes, I thought so too - but on the same antenna I have a couple of L1/L2
> continously logging survey receivers; the position accuracy should be
> within 5-10 mm. Unless I've messed something up with coordinate systems,
> the position the UBlox thinks it has should be pretty good.
>
> Ole
>
> On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 5:43 PM, Jean-Louis Oneto <jl.oneto@free.fr> wrote:
>
>> Hi Ole,
>> I think that the long term undulation are caused by a (small) error in
>> geodetic position of the antenna. The period should be a sidereal day
>> (23:56...)
>> Have a good day,
>> Jean-Louis
>>
>>
>>
>> Envoyé depuis mon appareil mobile Samsung.
>>
>> -------- Message d'origine --------
>> De : Ole Petter Ronningen <opronningen@gmail.com>
>> Date :07/11/2017 15:15 (GMT+01:00)
>> A : Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <
>> time-nuts@febo.com>
>> Objet : Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
>>
>> Hi all
>>
>> Attached is a 24 hour plot of PPS out from a UBlox 6T against a hydrogen
>> maser. From 00:00 the bare receiver board was inside a polystyrene box
>> where it has soaked for many months, at 16:00 I removed the box exposing
>> the board to the airflow in the room, including AC. The box was left off
>> for the rest of the day.
>>
>> The green trace is temperature in the lab. The "long term undulation" in
>> phase is normal, although I do not know the precise cause (multipath or
>> something else. I am reasonably sure it is not related to temperature in
>> the lab.
>>
>> [image: Inline image 1])
>>
>> Ole
>>
>> On Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 6:06 PM, Denny Page <denny@cococafe.com> wrote:
>>
>>> [I hate finding unsent email in my folder :-]
>>>
>>> Others may disagree, but I doubt that the type of small temperature
>>> variation you are referring to has any meaningful effect on tracking.
>> While
>>> the datasheet for the M8T says that there can be "significant impact" to
>>> the specifications at “extreme operating temperatures,” it gives the
>>> operating temperature as -40 to +85 C. Simply said, if you can stand to
>> be
>>> in the same room/space with it, I think you are fine.
>>>
>>> Of much greater interest would be the antenna and it’s placement. I’m
>>> afraid I can’t specifically recommend a “good” antenna, but perhaps
>> others
>>> on the list can. For my EVK-M8T, I’m using the antenna that came with the
>>> kit and it works very well. I haven’t tested other antennas with the M8T
>> at
>>> this time, but I do have a number of other devices with antennas that
>> work
>>> well. I also have a few antennas that work poorly with all the devices,
>>> including the ones with which they came. Unfortunately pretty much all of
>>> them lack sufficient identification markings to identify
>> manufacture/model
>>> info.
>>>
>>> Regarding placement, I’ve found that in a restricted area even a few
>>> inches can have a significant impact on the average number of satellites
>>> and signal level. In my case, it’s associated with the single building
>>> structure, but it sounds your case is even more restrictive. Although it
>>> can be a very lengthy process, performing antenna surveys may help
>> improve
>>> your situation. For each location, you need to monitor the number of
>>> satellites and signal level for 24 hours or more before determining the
>>> relative merit of that location. Repeat… and repeat.. and repeat.
>>> Determining the very best location for the antenna will likely require as
>>> many antenna surveys as you have patience for. :)
>>>
>>> Hope this helps.
>>>
>>> Denny
>>>
>>>
>>>> On Nov 02, 2017, at 18:54, MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Earlier this week, I put the breakout board with my NEO-M8T into an
>>> aluminum can. The can is split into a lower half and an upper half. The
>>> lower half was insulated on its sides internally, but open to the upper
>>> half, which wasn't insulated. The lower area contains the NEO-M8T on its
>>> breakout board and its matching com breakout board.
>>>>
>>>> In the unusual skyview/RF environment described below:
>>>> - LH was typically showing two or three green sats, with a min of none
>>> and a max of five for very brief periods.
>>>> - The average dBc of the green sats was 22 dBc, with a max of 29 dBc.
>>>> - Two screen shots of LH from this time period show an Accu of 12 ns
>> and
>>> 33 ns.
>>>>
>>>> This morning, I insulated the inside of the upper half of the can, and
>>> added insulation to seal the top of the lower area into a chamber that
>>> contained the GPS module board & its com board. Since then, its run for
>>> around ten hours, same weather as yesterday except more rain, ambient
>> room
>>> temperature wasn't measured but is definitely warmer. Since after around
>> an
>>> hour of running:
>>>> - LH has been showing between two and eight green sats, typically three
>>> to five:
>>>> - Their average dBc is 30 dBc, with a max of 37 dBc.
>>>> - LH Accu is showing as 6 ns.
>>>>
>>>> I have no idea what the temperature is inside the chamber.
>>>>
>>>> As I write this, LH is showing three green sats, at 33, 34 and 35 dBc.
>>>>
>>>> I expected a more stable internal TCXO in the GPS module, but I didn't
>>> expect stronger signals. Although perhaps I should have, as the block
>>> diagram for the NEO-M8T does show its TCXO pointing at a "Fractional N
>>> Synthesizer" inside the UBX-M8030's "RF Block". It also shows a RTC
>> Crystal
>>> for a RTC inside the "Digital Block".
>>>>
>>>> Is this coincidence or can reception improve with:
>>>> - a higher temperature module?
>>>> - a more stable module temperature?
>>>>
>>>> I'm tempted to add some thermal mass (block of Al) to the top of the
>> M8T
>>> and a chunk of insulation on top of that.
>>>>
>>>> Michael
>>>>
>>>> p.s.
>>>> As I finish this, LH is showing five sats, 23, 30, 31, 32 & 34 dBc,
>> Accu
>>> 6 ns
>>>>
>>>> On 01/11/2017 9:55 AM, MLewis wrote:
>>>>> I had anticipated reception issues, which is why I went with the M8T
>>> for its sensitivity, multi-constellation and it's a timing module so a
>> good
>>> PPS on a single sat - only to get surprised that my version didn't have
>> GAL
>>> enabled. But I didn't envision reception would be so bad that not having
>>> GAL would be material.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm also too close to that tall building that is reflecting the sats
>>> over the Bering Strait at me. It's a military computer site, which I
>>> thought would be pretty tight on stray RF, but it has antennas. I asked a
>>> friend who works there about my GPS issues and if RF from the site may be
>>> influencing things. He hesitated, then said "'Yes'. That's all I can
>> say."
>>>>> For first power up I had obtained an active antenna for
>>> multi-constellation and a pre-filter that "provides protection from near
>>> frequency or strong harmonic interfering signals."
>>>>> ...
>>>>>
>>>>> On 01/11/2017 8:45 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
>>>>>> Hi
>>>>>>
>>>>>> For NTP levels of accuracy Glonas is quite fine. Combining that with
>>> GPS should
>>>>>> get you a pretty good “time source” even under your extreme
>> conditions.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Bob
>>>>>>> On Oct 31, 2017, at 11:14 PM, MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I'm stuck with a near ground level antenna site (~16" above grade?),
>>> with half a sky view (thankfully to the SSE), less some low blocking
>>> buildings with regular mutlipath, plus multipath bouncing off a taller
>>> building to the SE that bounces sats from the NW at me from low over the
>>> Bering Strait. The building I'm in is concrete with flat steel under each
>>> floor from the construction method. As I write this I'm down to two green
>>> sats in LH.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> A number of times a day, it will drop to one sat, and there's a few
>>> dropouts a day where it goes to none of sufficient signal. How many times
>>> and for how long varies by the day. It's worse when it's wet out, which
>> it
>>> is right now. If I lower the signal strength threshold, then I end up
>> with
>>> tons of multipath signals.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> ...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> While I wrote this, LH was typically showing two or three green
>> sats,
>>> once up to five and once down to one. And I just hit a dropout... for a
>>> minute and a half; the one remaining green sat went behind the corner of
>>> the building's entrance canopy, then back out.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On 31/10/2017 10:30 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
>>>>>>>> Hi
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Under what conditions would you expect to loose GPS? I seem to be
>>> able to
>>>>>>>> do just fine sitting in an armchair here in the family room. That’s
>>> hardly a
>>>>>>>> fancy setup.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Bob
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>>>>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
>>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>>>>> and follow the instructions there.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>>>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
>>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>>>> and follow the instructions there.
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
>>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>>> and follow the instructions there.
>>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>> and follow the instructions there.
>> _______________________________________________
>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
>> and follow the instructions there.
>>
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
GE
Gary E. Miller
Tue, Nov 7, 2017 8:40 PM
Another question: If You have an error in the surveyed position of
say 3meters and you receive all of the available satellites in all
directions how much will this really affect your timing?
I'll oversimply a bit by repeating Adm. Grace Hoppers famous giveaway.
When asked, she handed out 9 inch long peieces of wire, and said: that
is a nanaosecond.
3m is about 118.11 inches is about 13 ns. So worst case, skipping the
3D math, yoy get about +/13 ns.
Which is small compared to the published GPS time resolution (IS_GPS_200H,
page 54) of 90 ns.
RGDS
GARY
Gary E. Miller Rellim 109 NW Wilmington Ave., Suite E, Bend, OR 97703
gem@rellim.com Tel:+1 541 382 8588
Veritas liberabit vos. -- Quid est veritas?
"If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it." - Lord Kelvin
Yo Lars!
On Tue, 7 Nov 2017 20:32:19 +0000
Lars Walenius <lars.walenius@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Another question: If You have an error in the surveyed position of
> say 3meters and you receive all of the available satellites in all
> directions how much will this really affect your timing?
I'll oversimply a bit by repeating Adm. Grace Hoppers famous giveaway.
When asked, she handed out 9 inch long peieces of wire, and said: that
is a nanaosecond.
3m is about 118.11 inches is about 13 ns. So worst case, skipping the
3D math, yoy get about +/13 ns.
Which is small compared to the published GPS time resolution (IS_GPS_200H,
page 54) of 90 ns.
RGDS
GARY
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gary E. Miller Rellim 109 NW Wilmington Ave., Suite E, Bend, OR 97703
gem@rellim.com Tel:+1 541 382 8588
Veritas liberabit vos. -- Quid est veritas?
"If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it." - Lord Kelvin
OP
Ole Petter Ronningen
Tue, Nov 7, 2017 9:30 PM
Not knowing better, I would expect there to be diurnal effects due to the
ionospere being in the shade or not. I suspect there are people on this
list that know better.
Anyway, the effect I am seeing is also very slowly drifing, see screenshot
of about 20 days of data below. The daily variation varies quite a bit. I
am not sure this can be explained by ionospheric activity, but then again I
dont know much about what goes on up there.
As mentioned, I also have L1/L2 data from the same period, I believe it is
possible to extract or at least estimate the Total Electron Content from
that data somehow, but I do not know how - it gets pretty arcane pretty
quickly for a layman.
Ole
[image: Inline image 1]
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 9:32 PM, Lars Walenius lars.walenius@hotmail.com
wrote:
Hi all,
If I look on the NIST database for the last days it seems to be a daily
variation of about 8-10ns. Could this be for the same reason as Ole’s
variation? Is the daily variations due to not perfect ionosphere
correction? Can you get much better than the data in the NIST database for
an ordinary timing receiver like the LEA-6T?
https://www.nist.gov/pml/time-and-frequency-division/
services/gps-data-archive
Another question: If You have an error in the surveyed position of say
3meters and you receive all of the available satellites in all directions
how much will this really affect your timing?
Sorry for all the silly questions.
Lars
Från: time-nuts time-nuts-bounces@febo.com för Bob Camp kb8tq@n1k.org
Skickat: Tuesday, November 7, 2017 8:21:44 PM
Till: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
Ämne: Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
Hi
If you go back into the NIST evaluations of various receiver modules …..
they don’t always
work best with the correct coordinates. Some have guessed there are
residual math errors
in the devices. Others suggest the “radio side” may be at fault. Indeed
varying susceptibility
to multipath might be the answer.
Bob
Yes, I thought so too - but on the same antenna I have a couple of L1/L2
continously logging survey receivers; the position accuracy should be
within 5-10 mm. Unless I've messed something up with coordinate systems,
the position the UBlox thinks it has should be pretty good.
Ole
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 5:43 PM, Jean-Louis Oneto jl.oneto@free.fr
Hi Ole,
I think that the long term undulation are caused by a (small) error in
geodetic position of the antenna. The period should be a sidereal day
(23:56...)
Have a good day,
Jean-Louis
Envoyé depuis mon appareil mobile Samsung.
-------- Message d'origine --------
De : Ole Petter Ronningen opronningen@gmail.com
Date :07/11/2017 15:15 (GMT+01:00)
A : Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <
time-nuts@febo.com>
Objet : Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
Hi all
Attached is a 24 hour plot of PPS out from a UBlox 6T against a hydrogen
maser. From 00:00 the bare receiver board was inside a polystyrene box
where it has soaked for many months, at 16:00 I removed the box exposing
the board to the airflow in the room, including AC. The box was left off
for the rest of the day.
The green trace is temperature in the lab. The "long term undulation" in
phase is normal, although I do not know the precise cause (multipath or
something else. I am reasonably sure it is not related to temperature in
the lab.
[image: Inline image 1])
Ole
On Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 6:06 PM, Denny Page denny@cococafe.com wrote:
[I hate finding unsent email in my folder :-]
Others may disagree, but I doubt that the type of small temperature
variation you are referring to has any meaningful effect on tracking.
the datasheet for the M8T says that there can be "significant impact"
the specifications at “extreme operating temperatures,” it gives the
operating temperature as -40 to +85 C. Simply said, if you can stand to
in the same room/space with it, I think you are fine.
Of much greater interest would be the antenna and it’s placement. I’m
afraid I can’t specifically recommend a “good” antenna, but perhaps
on the list can. For my EVK-M8T, I’m using the antenna that came with
kit and it works very well. I haven’t tested other antennas with the
this time, but I do have a number of other devices with antennas that
well. I also have a few antennas that work poorly with all the devices,
including the ones with which they came. Unfortunately pretty much all
them lack sufficient identification markings to identify
info.
Regarding placement, I’ve found that in a restricted area even a few
inches can have a significant impact on the average number of
and signal level. In my case, it’s associated with the single building
structure, but it sounds your case is even more restrictive. Although
can be a very lengthy process, performing antenna surveys may help
your situation. For each location, you need to monitor the number of
satellites and signal level for 24 hours or more before determining the
relative merit of that location. Repeat… and repeat.. and repeat.
Determining the very best location for the antenna will likely require
many antenna surveys as you have patience for. :)
Hope this helps.
Denny
On Nov 02, 2017, at 18:54, MLewis mlewis000@rogers.com wrote:
Earlier this week, I put the breakout board with my NEO-M8T into an
aluminum can. The can is split into a lower half and an upper half. The
lower half was insulated on its sides internally, but open to the upper
half, which wasn't insulated. The lower area contains the NEO-M8T on
breakout board and its matching com breakout board.
In the unusual skyview/RF environment described below:
- LH was typically showing two or three green sats, with a min of none
and a max of five for very brief periods.
- The average dBc of the green sats was 22 dBc, with a max of 29 dBc.
- Two screen shots of LH from this time period show an Accu of 12 ns
This morning, I insulated the inside of the upper half of the can, and
added insulation to seal the top of the lower area into a chamber that
contained the GPS module board & its com board. Since then, its run for
around ten hours, same weather as yesterday except more rain, ambient
temperature wasn't measured but is definitely warmer. Since after
- LH has been showing between two and eight green sats, typically
- Their average dBc is 30 dBc, with a max of 37 dBc.
- LH Accu is showing as 6 ns.
I have no idea what the temperature is inside the chamber.
As I write this, LH is showing three green sats, at 33, 34 and 35 dBc.
I expected a more stable internal TCXO in the GPS module, but I didn't
expect stronger signals. Although perhaps I should have, as the block
diagram for the NEO-M8T does show its TCXO pointing at a "Fractional N
Synthesizer" inside the UBX-M8030's "RF Block". It also shows a RTC
for a RTC inside the "Digital Block".
Is this coincidence or can reception improve with:
- a higher temperature module?
- a more stable module temperature?
I'm tempted to add some thermal mass (block of Al) to the top of the
and a chunk of insulation on top of that.
Michael
p.s.
As I finish this, LH is showing five sats, 23, 30, 31, 32 & 34 dBc,
On 01/11/2017 9:55 AM, MLewis wrote:
I had anticipated reception issues, which is why I went with the M8T
for its sensitivity, multi-constellation and it's a timing module so a
PPS on a single sat - only to get surprised that my version didn't have
enabled. But I didn't envision reception would be so bad that not
I'm also too close to that tall building that is reflecting the sats
over the Bering Strait at me. It's a military computer site, which I
thought would be pretty tight on stray RF, but it has antennas. I
friend who works there about my GPS issues and if RF from the site may
influencing things. He hesitated, then said "'Yes'. That's all I can
For first power up I had obtained an active antenna for
multi-constellation and a pre-filter that "provides protection from
frequency or strong harmonic interfering signals."
...
On 01/11/2017 8:45 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi
For NTP levels of accuracy Glonas is quite fine. Combining that with
get you a pretty good “time source” even under your extreme
On Oct 31, 2017, at 11:14 PM, MLewis mlewis000@rogers.com wrote:
I'm stuck with a near ground level antenna site (~16" above
with half a sky view (thankfully to the SSE), less some low blocking
buildings with regular mutlipath, plus multipath bouncing off a taller
building to the SE that bounces sats from the NW at me from low over
Bering Strait. The building I'm in is concrete with flat steel under
floor from the construction method. As I write this I'm down to two
A number of times a day, it will drop to one sat, and there's a few
dropouts a day where it goes to none of sufficient signal. How many
and for how long varies by the day. It's worse when it's wet out, which
is right now. If I lower the signal strength threshold, then I end up
tons of multipath signals.
...
While I wrote this, LH was typically showing two or three green
once up to five and once down to one. And I just hit a dropout... for a
minute and a half; the one remaining green sat went behind the corner
the building's entrance canopy, then back out.
On 31/10/2017 10:30 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
Hi
Under what conditions would you expect to loose GPS? I seem to be
do just fine sitting in an armchair here in the family room.
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
Not knowing better, I would expect there to be diurnal effects due to the
ionospere being in the shade or not. I suspect there are people on this
list that know better.
Anyway, the effect I am seeing is also very slowly drifing, see screenshot
of about 20 days of data below. The daily variation varies quite a bit. I
am not sure this can be explained by ionospheric activity, but then again I
dont know much about what goes on up there.
As mentioned, I also have L1/L2 data from the same period, I believe it is
possible to extract or at least estimate the Total Electron Content from
that data somehow, but I do not know how - it gets pretty arcane pretty
quickly for a layman.
Ole
[image: Inline image 1]
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 9:32 PM, Lars Walenius <lars.walenius@hotmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi all,
>
>
>
> If I look on the NIST database for the last days it seems to be a daily
> variation of about 8-10ns. Could this be for the same reason as Ole’s
> variation? Is the daily variations due to not perfect ionosphere
> correction? Can you get much better than the data in the NIST database for
> an ordinary timing receiver like the LEA-6T?
>
>
>
> https://www.nist.gov/pml/time-and-frequency-division/
> services/gps-data-archive
>
>
>
> Another question: If You have an error in the surveyed position of say
> 3meters and you receive all of the available satellites in all directions
> how much will this really affect your timing?
>
>
>
> Sorry for all the silly questions.
>
>
>
> Lars
>
>
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> Från: time-nuts <time-nuts-bounces@febo.com> för Bob Camp <kb8tq@n1k.org>
> Skickat: Tuesday, November 7, 2017 8:21:44 PM
> Till: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
> Ämne: Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
>
> Hi
>
> If you go back into the NIST evaluations of various receiver modules …..
> they don’t always
> work best with the correct coordinates. Some have guessed there are
> residual math errors
> in the devices. Others suggest the “radio side” may be at fault. Indeed
> varying susceptibility
> to multipath *might* be the answer.
>
> Bob
>
> > On Nov 7, 2017, at 2:12 PM, Ole Petter Ronningen <opronningen@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >
> > Yes, I thought so too - but on the same antenna I have a couple of L1/L2
> > continously logging survey receivers; the position accuracy should be
> > within 5-10 mm. Unless I've messed something up with coordinate systems,
> > the position the UBlox thinks it has should be pretty good.
> >
> > Ole
> >
> > On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 5:43 PM, Jean-Louis Oneto <jl.oneto@free.fr>
> wrote:
> >
> >> Hi Ole,
> >> I think that the long term undulation are caused by a (small) error in
> >> geodetic position of the antenna. The period should be a sidereal day
> >> (23:56...)
> >> Have a good day,
> >> Jean-Louis
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> Envoyé depuis mon appareil mobile Samsung.
> >>
> >> -------- Message d'origine --------
> >> De : Ole Petter Ronningen <opronningen@gmail.com>
> >> Date :07/11/2017 15:15 (GMT+01:00)
> >> A : Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement <
> >> time-nuts@febo.com>
> >> Objet : Re: [time-nuts] ublox NEO-M8T improved by insulated chamber?
> >>
> >> Hi all
> >>
> >> Attached is a 24 hour plot of PPS out from a UBlox 6T against a hydrogen
> >> maser. From 00:00 the bare receiver board was inside a polystyrene box
> >> where it has soaked for many months, at 16:00 I removed the box exposing
> >> the board to the airflow in the room, including AC. The box was left off
> >> for the rest of the day.
> >>
> >> The green trace is temperature in the lab. The "long term undulation" in
> >> phase is normal, although I do not know the precise cause (multipath or
> >> something else. I am reasonably sure it is not related to temperature in
> >> the lab.
> >>
> >> [image: Inline image 1])
> >>
> >> Ole
> >>
> >> On Sat, Nov 4, 2017 at 6:06 PM, Denny Page <denny@cococafe.com> wrote:
> >>
> >>> [I hate finding unsent email in my folder :-]
> >>>
> >>> Others may disagree, but I doubt that the type of small temperature
> >>> variation you are referring to has any meaningful effect on tracking.
> >> While
> >>> the datasheet for the M8T says that there can be "significant impact"
> to
> >>> the specifications at “extreme operating temperatures,” it gives the
> >>> operating temperature as -40 to +85 C. Simply said, if you can stand to
> >> be
> >>> in the same room/space with it, I think you are fine.
> >>>
> >>> Of much greater interest would be the antenna and it’s placement. I’m
> >>> afraid I can’t specifically recommend a “good” antenna, but perhaps
> >> others
> >>> on the list can. For my EVK-M8T, I’m using the antenna that came with
> the
> >>> kit and it works very well. I haven’t tested other antennas with the
> M8T
> >> at
> >>> this time, but I do have a number of other devices with antennas that
> >> work
> >>> well. I also have a few antennas that work poorly with all the devices,
> >>> including the ones with which they came. Unfortunately pretty much all
> of
> >>> them lack sufficient identification markings to identify
> >> manufacture/model
> >>> info.
> >>>
> >>> Regarding placement, I’ve found that in a restricted area even a few
> >>> inches can have a significant impact on the average number of
> satellites
> >>> and signal level. In my case, it’s associated with the single building
> >>> structure, but it sounds your case is even more restrictive. Although
> it
> >>> can be a very lengthy process, performing antenna surveys may help
> >> improve
> >>> your situation. For each location, you need to monitor the number of
> >>> satellites and signal level for 24 hours or more before determining the
> >>> relative merit of that location. Repeat… and repeat.. and repeat.
> >>> Determining the very best location for the antenna will likely require
> as
> >>> many antenna surveys as you have patience for. :)
> >>>
> >>> Hope this helps.
> >>>
> >>> Denny
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>> On Nov 02, 2017, at 18:54, MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> Earlier this week, I put the breakout board with my NEO-M8T into an
> >>> aluminum can. The can is split into a lower half and an upper half. The
> >>> lower half was insulated on its sides internally, but open to the upper
> >>> half, which wasn't insulated. The lower area contains the NEO-M8T on
> its
> >>> breakout board and its matching com breakout board.
> >>>>
> >>>> In the unusual skyview/RF environment described below:
> >>>> - LH was typically showing two or three green sats, with a min of none
> >>> and a max of five for very brief periods.
> >>>> - The average dBc of the green sats was 22 dBc, with a max of 29 dBc.
> >>>> - Two screen shots of LH from this time period show an Accu of 12 ns
> >> and
> >>> 33 ns.
> >>>>
> >>>> This morning, I insulated the inside of the upper half of the can, and
> >>> added insulation to seal the top of the lower area into a chamber that
> >>> contained the GPS module board & its com board. Since then, its run for
> >>> around ten hours, same weather as yesterday except more rain, ambient
> >> room
> >>> temperature wasn't measured but is definitely warmer. Since after
> around
> >> an
> >>> hour of running:
> >>>> - LH has been showing between two and eight green sats, typically
> three
> >>> to five:
> >>>> - Their average dBc is 30 dBc, with a max of 37 dBc.
> >>>> - LH Accu is showing as 6 ns.
> >>>>
> >>>> I have no idea what the temperature is inside the chamber.
> >>>>
> >>>> As I write this, LH is showing three green sats, at 33, 34 and 35 dBc.
> >>>>
> >>>> I expected a more stable internal TCXO in the GPS module, but I didn't
> >>> expect stronger signals. Although perhaps I should have, as the block
> >>> diagram for the NEO-M8T does show its TCXO pointing at a "Fractional N
> >>> Synthesizer" inside the UBX-M8030's "RF Block". It also shows a RTC
> >> Crystal
> >>> for a RTC inside the "Digital Block".
> >>>>
> >>>> Is this coincidence or can reception improve with:
> >>>> - a higher temperature module?
> >>>> - a more stable module temperature?
> >>>>
> >>>> I'm tempted to add some thermal mass (block of Al) to the top of the
> >> M8T
> >>> and a chunk of insulation on top of that.
> >>>>
> >>>> Michael
> >>>>
> >>>> p.s.
> >>>> As I finish this, LH is showing five sats, 23, 30, 31, 32 & 34 dBc,
> >> Accu
> >>> 6 ns
> >>>>
> >>>> On 01/11/2017 9:55 AM, MLewis wrote:
> >>>>> I had anticipated reception issues, which is why I went with the M8T
> >>> for its sensitivity, multi-constellation and it's a timing module so a
> >> good
> >>> PPS on a single sat - only to get surprised that my version didn't have
> >> GAL
> >>> enabled. But I didn't envision reception would be so bad that not
> having
> >>> GAL would be material.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> I'm also too close to that tall building that is reflecting the sats
> >>> over the Bering Strait at me. It's a military computer site, which I
> >>> thought would be pretty tight on stray RF, but it has antennas. I
> asked a
> >>> friend who works there about my GPS issues and if RF from the site may
> be
> >>> influencing things. He hesitated, then said "'Yes'. That's all I can
> >> say."
> >>>>> For first power up I had obtained an active antenna for
> >>> multi-constellation and a pre-filter that "provides protection from
> near
> >>> frequency or strong harmonic interfering signals."
> >>>>> ...
> >>>>>
> >>>>> On 01/11/2017 8:45 AM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
> >>>>>> Hi
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> For NTP levels of accuracy Glonas is quite fine. Combining that with
> >>> GPS should
> >>>>>> get you a pretty good “time source” even under your extreme
> >> conditions.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Bob
> >>>>>>> On Oct 31, 2017, at 11:14 PM, MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> I'm stuck with a near ground level antenna site (~16" above
> grade?),
> >>> with half a sky view (thankfully to the SSE), less some low blocking
> >>> buildings with regular mutlipath, plus multipath bouncing off a taller
> >>> building to the SE that bounces sats from the NW at me from low over
> the
> >>> Bering Strait. The building I'm in is concrete with flat steel under
> each
> >>> floor from the construction method. As I write this I'm down to two
> green
> >>> sats in LH.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> A number of times a day, it will drop to one sat, and there's a few
> >>> dropouts a day where it goes to none of sufficient signal. How many
> times
> >>> and for how long varies by the day. It's worse when it's wet out, which
> >> it
> >>> is right now. If I lower the signal strength threshold, then I end up
> >> with
> >>> tons of multipath signals.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> ...
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> While I wrote this, LH was typically showing two or three green
> >> sats,
> >>> once up to five and once down to one. And I just hit a dropout... for a
> >>> minute and a half; the one remaining green sat went behind the corner
> of
> >>> the building's entrance canopy, then back out.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> On 31/10/2017 10:30 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
> >>>>>>>> Hi
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> Under what conditions would you expect to loose GPS? I seem to be
> >>> able to
> >>>>>>>> do just fine sitting in an armchair here in the family room.
> That’s
> >>> hardly a
> >>>>>>>> fancy setup.
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> Bob
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>> _______________________________________________
> >>>>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> >>>>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> >>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> >>>>> and follow the instructions there.
> >>>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> _______________________________________________
> >>>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> >>>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> >>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> >>>> and follow the instructions there.
> >>>
> >>> _______________________________________________
> >>> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> >>> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> >>> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> >>> and follow the instructions there.
> >>>
> >>
> >> _______________________________________________
> >> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> >> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> >> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> >> and follow the instructions there.
> >> _______________________________________________
> >> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> >> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> >> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> >> and follow the instructions there.
> >>
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> > time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> > To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/
> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> > and follow the instructions there.
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> mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
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> and follow the instructions there.
>
M
MLewis
Tue, Nov 7, 2017 9:44 PM
Yo Gary!
With a strictly SSE skyview, I still regularly get signals from sats to
my NW. When they're at the right elevation and heading, their signals
pass over me and reflect back at me from a tall building. When running
my M8T with the position unlocked, and those NW sats are getting a
reflection and reporting in, (although the reflecting building is
further away to the SE) my GPS position drifts up to 300' to my south (S
of SSE). (reported position goes for a walk, staggering across the
parking lot, wanders through a park with an occasional loop, across a
road, then sits down for a while, before wandering back)
Is it reasonable to use the 9" ~= 1 ns for:
running with a fixed & correct survey position, and NW sats reflecting a
signal to me, that 300' drift would equate to a (300' x 12") / 9" =
400, for a ballpark 400 ns error?
Thanks,
Michael
On 07/11/2017 3:40 PM, Gary E. Miller wrote:
Another question: If You have an error in the surveyed position of
say 3meters and you receive all of the available satellites in all
directions how much will this really affect your timing?
I'll oversimply a bit by repeating Adm. Grace Hoppers famous giveaway.
When asked, she handed out 9 inch long peieces of wire, and said: that
is a nanaosecond.
3m is about 118.11 inches is about 13 ns. So worst case, skipping the
3D math, yoy get about +/13 ns.
Which is small compared to the published GPS time resolution (IS_GPS_200H,
page 54) of 90 ns.
RGDS
GARY
Gary E. Miller Rellim 109 NW Wilmington Ave., Suite E, Bend, OR 97703
gem@rellim.com Tel:+1 541 382 8588
Veritas liberabit vos. -- Quid est veritas?
"If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it." - Lord Kelvin
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
Yo Gary!
With a strictly SSE skyview, I still regularly get signals from sats to
my NW. When they're at the right elevation and heading, their signals
pass over me and reflect back at me from a tall building. When running
my M8T with the position unlocked, and those NW sats are getting a
reflection and reporting in, (although the reflecting building is
further away to the SE) my GPS position drifts up to 300' to my south (S
of SSE). (reported position goes for a walk, staggering across the
parking lot, wanders through a park with an occasional loop, across a
road, then sits down for a while, before wandering back)
Is it reasonable to use the 9" ~= 1 ns for:
running with a fixed & correct survey position, and NW sats reflecting a
signal to me, that 300' drift would equate to a (300' x 12") / 9" =
400, for a ballpark 400 ns error?
Thanks,
Michael
On 07/11/2017 3:40 PM, Gary E. Miller wrote:
> Yo Lars!
>
> On Tue, 7 Nov 2017 20:32:19 +0000
> Lars Walenius <lars.walenius@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Another question: If You have an error in the surveyed position of
>> say 3meters and you receive all of the available satellites in all
>> directions how much will this really affect your timing?
> I'll oversimply a bit by repeating Adm. Grace Hoppers famous giveaway.
> When asked, she handed out 9 inch long peieces of wire, and said: that
> is a nanaosecond.
>
> 3m is about 118.11 inches is about 13 ns. So worst case, skipping the
> 3D math, yoy get about +/13 ns.
>
> Which is small compared to the published GPS time resolution (IS_GPS_200H,
> page 54) of 90 ns.
>
> RGDS
> GARY
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Gary E. Miller Rellim 109 NW Wilmington Ave., Suite E, Bend, OR 97703
> gem@rellim.com Tel:+1 541 382 8588
>
> Veritas liberabit vos. -- Quid est veritas?
> "If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it." - Lord Kelvin
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
> To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
> and follow the instructions there.
CC
Chris Caudle
Tue, Nov 7, 2017 9:52 PM
On Tue, November 7, 2017 3:30 pm, Ole Petter Ronningen wrote:
Not knowing better, I would expect there to be diurnal effects due to the
ionospere being in the shade or not.
I think that is generally true.
Anyway, the effect I am seeing is also very slowly drifting, see screenshot
of about 20 days of data below.
Your pictures are not making it to the list, it seems the list server
strips out inline images. Actually inline images would imply you are
probably sending HTML messages and they are getting converted to plain
text. You could try attaching the image as an attachment to a plain text
message, that may get through to the list.
Regarding the drifting, if you mean relative to the wall clock time, GPS
to planet alignment shifts because of rotation of earth, so the GPS
effects tend to align to around 23 hours, not 24 hours. Is that the drift
you are seeing, or more than about an hour per day relative to solar time?
--
Chris Caudle
On Tue, November 7, 2017 3:30 pm, Ole Petter Ronningen wrote:
> Not knowing better, I would expect there to be diurnal effects due to the
> ionospere being in the shade or not.
I think that is generally true.
> Anyway, the effect I am seeing is also very slowly drifting, see screenshot
> of about 20 days of data below.
Your pictures are not making it to the list, it seems the list server
strips out inline images. Actually inline images would imply you are
probably sending HTML messages and they are getting converted to plain
text. You could try attaching the image as an attachment to a plain text
message, that may get through to the list.
Regarding the drifting, if you mean relative to the wall clock time, GPS
to planet alignment shifts because of rotation of earth, so the GPS
effects tend to align to around 23 hours, not 24 hours. Is that the drift
you are seeing, or more than about an hour per day relative to solar time?
--
Chris Caudle
GE
Gary E. Miller
Tue, Nov 7, 2017 10:42 PM
With a strictly SSE skyview, I still regularly get signals from sats
to my NW. When they're at the right elevation and heading, their
signals pass over me and reflect back at me from a tall building.
When running my M8T with the position unlocked, and those NW sats are
getting a reflection and reporting in, (although the reflecting
building is further away to the SE) my GPS position drifts up to 300'
to my south (S of SSE). (reported position goes for a walk,
staggering across the parking lot, wanders through a park with an
occasional loop, across a road, then sits down for a while, before
wandering back)
Yeah, one of my test locations has similar issues. It leads to some
'interesting' results.
Is it reasonable to use the 9" ~= 1 ns for:
running with a fixed & correct survey position, and NW sats
reflecting a signal to me, that 300' drift would equate to a (300' x
12") / 9" = 400, for a ballpark 400 ns error?
I think it is reasonable as a worst case. Basically a 1D model of a
3D problem. With good sat angles, the 3m location change will be
trigonomically smaller for a sat at an angle.
But, as I said, given that GPS only resolves to 90 ns, the worst case
+/- 13 ns is noise.
RGDS
GARY
Gary E. Miller Rellim 109 NW Wilmington Ave., Suite E, Bend, OR 97703
gem@rellim.com Tel:+1 541 382 8588
Veritas liberabit vos. -- Quid est veritas?
"If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it." - Lord Kelvin
Yo MLewis!
On Tue, 7 Nov 2017 16:44:05 -0500
MLewis <mlewis000@rogers.com> wrote:
> With a strictly SSE skyview, I still regularly get signals from sats
> to my NW. When they're at the right elevation and heading, their
> signals pass over me and reflect back at me from a tall building.
> When running my M8T with the position unlocked, and those NW sats are
> getting a reflection and reporting in, (although the reflecting
> building is further away to the SE) my GPS position drifts up to 300'
> to my south (S of SSE). (reported position goes for a walk,
> staggering across the parking lot, wanders through a park with an
> occasional loop, across a road, then sits down for a while, before
> wandering back)
Yeah, one of my test locations has similar issues. It leads to some
'interesting' results.
> Is it reasonable to use the 9" ~= 1 ns for:
> running with a fixed & correct survey position, and NW sats
> reflecting a signal to me, that 300' drift would equate to a (300' x
> 12") / 9" = 400, for a ballpark 400 ns error?
I think it is reasonable as a worst case. Basically a 1D model of a
3D problem. With good sat angles, the 3m location change will be
trigonomically smaller for a sat at an angle.
But, as I said, given that GPS only resolves to 90 ns, the worst case
+/- 13 ns is noise.
RGDS
GARY
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gary E. Miller Rellim 109 NW Wilmington Ave., Suite E, Bend, OR 97703
gem@rellim.com Tel:+1 541 382 8588
Veritas liberabit vos. -- Quid est veritas?
"If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it." - Lord Kelvin
J
jimlux
Wed, Nov 8, 2017 2:12 AM
On 11/7/17 1:30 PM, Ole Petter Ronningen wrote:
Not knowing better, I would expect there to be diurnal effects due to the
ionospere being in the shade or not. I suspect there are people on this
list that know better.
Anyway, the effect I am seeing is also very slowly drifing, see screenshot
of about 20 days of data below. The daily variation varies quite a bit. I
am not sure this can be explained by ionospheric activity, but then again I
dont know much about what goes on up there.
As mentioned, I also have L1/L2 data from the same period, I believe it is
possible to extract or at least estimate the Total Electron Content from
that data somehow, but I do not know how - it gets pretty arcane pretty
quickly for a layman.
Ole
On 11/7/17 1:30 PM, Ole Petter Ronningen wrote:
> Not knowing better, I would expect there to be diurnal effects due to the
> ionospere being in the shade or not. I suspect there are people on this
> list that know better.
>
> Anyway, the effect I am seeing is also very slowly drifing, see screenshot
> of about 20 days of data below. The daily variation varies quite a bit. I
> am not sure this can be explained by ionospheric activity, but then again I
> dont know much about what goes on up there.
>
> As mentioned, I also have L1/L2 data from the same period, I believe it is
> possible to extract or at least estimate the Total Electron Content from
> that data somehow, but I do not know how - it gets pretty arcane pretty
> quickly for a layman.
>
> Ole
http://www.navipedia.net/index.php/Ionospheric_Delay
has a nice discussion with simple equations to turn TEC into delay, etc.
You might also look into seeing if you can put your data in a form to be
processed by GIPSY at JPL - they have a service where you can upload
your raw observables and they post process it.
https://gipsy-oasis.jpl.nasa.gov/