At 10:18 PM 5/9/2004 -0400, Henry Spencer wrote:

On Sun, 9 May 2004, John Carmack wrote:
> http://www.armadilloaerospace.com/n.x/Armadillo/Home/News?news_id=257

Hmm...  A possible alternative to the "cracked trace" theory is that it's
got Surface Acoustic Wave filters in it somewhere; they are sonic in
nature and have at least the potential to be messed up by vibration.
(I would not have thought it likely, but I don't know the technology
quite well enough to rule it out.)

Both SAW filters and crystal oscillators are piezoelectric devices and thus affected by mechanical stress. My guess is that the main oscillator crystal is the culprit. It could be pulled off frequency by gross changes in G-loading, which would force the signal tracking loops to re-acquire the satellites, causing data dropouts. More likely, mechanical vibration on the crystal is adding electrical "phase noise" to its frequency output. Simplifying a bit, this noise effectively degrades the signal-to-noise ratio of the received satellite signals. It might degrade SNR enough in your system to lose track of the signals completely.

Historically, the g-sensitivity and vibration sensitivity of crystal
oscillators in GPS systems was of great interest to the military.
There were (and may still be) export controls on certain kinds of
crystals and oscillators.

To fix your problem, you might try vibration-isolating just the
master crystal/oscillator from the GPS board, or replacing it with
a better off-board one.

Cheers!
--Stu


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