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John Kasupski wrote:
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 05:51:02 -0800, David wrote: John Kasupski wrote: On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 05:35:32 -0800, David wrote: They could put the new station on 60 kHz as well. If they can't get them adequately synchronized they could alternate every 30 minutes or whatever. This would avoid everyone having to buy new watches. Any commercial entity who really needs accurate time switched over to GPS a decade ago. Joke's on them. GPS time is implemented by the atomic clocks in the GPS ground control stations and the GPS satellites themselves. Since it is not updated with leap seconds, GPS is currently ahead of UTC by 14 seconds. Easily compensated for in the software. Well, that part of it is, but see my reply to Geoffrey's posts on the subject. There are other issues with using GPS as a time standard, which are related to the quality of the algorithms GPS receivers use to process data received from the satellites, as well as variations in the circuitry used to control receivers' internal clocks. 73 DE John, KC2HMZ Did you visit the ESE web site? They make the master clocks used in broadcasting (and a lot of public service and labs) and they have very well thought-out innards. Is GPS like NTP in as they just give a raw number of seconds since a certain date and that the receiver computes the real time from that, based on its firmware? |
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