You need an accurate 3d position to get accurate timing. To have an accurate 3d position using GPS alone, you need four satellites. Three only gets you a 2d lock, and less than that you don't get a lock at all.
There are receivers out there which will survey a position and then use that position to be able to continue to provide a timing signal if you subsequently lose lock but still have sats in view. As far as I know, this type of receiver is not in use in any commercially available timing product for the cambium radios. In fact I think we've almost all ended up using the exact same GPS modules, at least for any recently designed product. Some of the earlier products would attempt to preserve the sync signal across a GPS lock loss with various levels of success. For instance the cmm micro in early releases provided a wildly incorrect sync pulse even without a lock. Same with early syncpipes. The CTM has a holdover timer. And so on. I think most of us have moved away from this in newer designs. On Aug 11, 2015 8:36 AM, "Dan Petermann" <[email protected]> wrote: > What is the minimum amount of satellites needed for a proper GPS sync > pulse? > > And does that differ across products (CMM, CTM, SyncPipe, etc.)? >
