Re: [time-nuts] Homemade GPS Receiver

2014-09-26 Thread Dr. David Kirkby (Kirkby Microwave Ltd)
On 17 Sep 2014 23:38, Peter Putnam n...@sbcglobal.net wrote:

 Greetings,

 The link below describes a homemade GPS receiver.

 It is presented in a detailed and elegant manner that is certain to
appeal to this reflector's subscribers.

 Peter


 http://www.aholme.co.uk/GPS/Main.htm

I don't understand the units of signal strength

The L1 carrier is spread over a 2 MHz bandwidth and its strength at the
Earth's surface is -130 dBm. Thermal noise power in the same bandwidth is
-111 dBm

Then goes on to talk about the signal being 20 dB below the noise.

Unless the -130 dBm is over the whole surface area of the earth,  which I
doubt, the units make no sense to me. The units of signal strength should
be V/m, A/m or W/square metre.

The noise power should be in Watts or dBm. So taking the difference (19 dB,
which is approximately 20 dB) between these figures seems odd to me.

Dave
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Re: [time-nuts] Homemade GPS Receiver

2014-09-26 Thread Andrea Baldoni
On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 10:07:56AM +0100, Dr. David Kirkby (Kirkby Microwave 
Ltd) wrote:

 I don't understand the units of signal strength
 
 The L1 carrier is spread over a 2 MHz bandwidth and its strength at the
 Earth's surface is -130 dBm. Thermal noise power in the same bandwidth is
 -111 dBm
 
 Then goes on to talk about the signal being 20 dB below the noise.

Hello David.

It could be because there is a process gain associated in demodulating a
spread spectrum signal.

Best regards,
Andrea Baldoni
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Re: [time-nuts] Homemade GPS Receiver

2014-09-26 Thread Azelio Boriani
From gpsinformation.net:

In the frequency allocation filing the L1 C/A power is listed as 25.6
Watts.  The Antenna gain is listed at 13 dBi.  Thus, based on the
frequency allocation  filing, the power would be about 500 Watts (27
dBW).

Now, the free space path loss from 21000 km is about 182 dB.  Take the
500 Watts (27 dBW) and subtract the free space path loss (27 - 182)
and you get  -155 dBW. The end of life spec is -160 dBW, which leaves
a 5 dB margin.

And if you really get into it, you'll discover ALL of the following
represent the same approximate signal strength for GPS on the face of
the earth (m stands for milliwatts and m2 stands for meters squared):

-160 dBW, -130 dBm, -135 dBW/m2, -105 dBm/m2, -223 dBW/Hz, -163
dBW/MHz, -193 dBm/Hz, -198 dBW/m2/Hz, -138 dBW/m2/MHz

On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 1:22 PM, Andrea Baldoni erm1ea...@ermione.com wrote:
 On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 10:07:56AM +0100, Dr. David Kirkby (Kirkby Microwave 
 Ltd) wrote:

 I don't understand the units of signal strength

 The L1 carrier is spread over a 2 MHz bandwidth and its strength at the
 Earth's surface is -130 dBm. Thermal noise power in the same bandwidth is
 -111 dBm

 Then goes on to talk about the signal being 20 dB below the noise.

 Hello David.

 It could be because there is a process gain associated in demodulating a
 spread spectrum signal.

 Best regards,
 Andrea Baldoni
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Re: [time-nuts] Homemade GPS Receiver

2014-09-26 Thread Dr. David Kirkby (Kirkby Microwave Ltd)
On 26 Sep 2014 13:01, Andrea Baldoni erm1ea...@ermione.com wrote:

 On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 10:07:56AM +0100, Dr. David Kirkby (Kirkby
Microwave Ltd) wrote:

  I don't understand the units of signal strength
 
  The L1 carrier is spread over a 2 MHz bandwidth and its strength at the
  Earth's surface is -130 dBm. Thermal noise power in the same bandwidth
is
  -111 dBm
 
  Then goes on to talk about the signal being 20 dB below the noise.

 Hello David.

 It could be because there is a process gain associated in demodulating a
 spread spectrum signal.

 Best regards,
 Andrea Baldoni

But fundamentally to say

its strength at the Earth's surface is -130 dBm

makes no sense, UNLESS the author is trying to say that the earth receives
a signal of -130 dBm if you add up all the powers over every square metre
of the earth,  which I doubt is the meaning.

Recovering signals below the noise is certainly possible,  but that is not
my real concern.  It does however seems as though the author is comparing a
thermal noise in Watts to something that is not well defined.

I am guessing that the -130 dBm is the power collected by a dipole or
isotropic radiator, but whatever it is, the units in the text make no sense
to me.

Dave
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Re: [time-nuts] Homemade GPS Receiver

2014-09-26 Thread paul swed
It is because of the processing gain and I believe these to be normal
figures.
Not an expert here but when the system de-spreads the signal the
information pops up above the noise since the noise is random and the
spread carrier only appears random.
Regards
Paul
WB8TSL

On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 7:22 AM, Andrea Baldoni erm1ea...@ermione.com
wrote:

 On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 10:07:56AM +0100, Dr. David Kirkby (Kirkby
 Microwave Ltd) wrote:

  I don't understand the units of signal strength
 
  The L1 carrier is spread over a 2 MHz bandwidth and its strength at the
  Earth's surface is -130 dBm. Thermal noise power in the same bandwidth is
  -111 dBm
 
  Then goes on to talk about the signal being 20 dB below the noise.

 Hello David.

 It could be because there is a process gain associated in demodulating a
 spread spectrum signal.

 Best regards,
 Andrea Baldoni
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[time-nuts] SMTP with Trimble Thunderbolt-E

2014-09-26 Thread Luc Gaudin
Hello,

I need to have remotely access to Trimble Thunderbolt-E to manage it.
I first sort out the physical (network) parts to get the Serial port out on the 
network (unit CSE-H53N from Sollae Systems).
For management I am looking to use SNMP.
Is there any system capable to convert the serial information from the Trimble 
Thunderbolt to SNMP ?
Some people are talking about proxy agent.
Is any can help ?

Best regards

Luc Gaudin
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Re: [time-nuts] SMTP with Trimble Thunderbolt-E

2014-09-26 Thread Brian Lloyd
On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 8:17 AM, Luc Gaudin lgau...@naelcom.com wrote:

 Hello,

 I need to have remotely access to Trimble Thunderbolt-E to manage it.
 I first sort out the physical (network) parts to get the Serial port out
 on the network (unit CSE-H53N from Sollae Systems).
 For management I am looking to use SNMP.
 Is there any system capable to convert the serial information from the
 Trimble Thunderbolt to SNMP ?
 Some people are talking about proxy agent.


That is probably the only way.


 Is any can help ?


The world seems to have split the problem into two parts: using SNMP for
monitoring and HTTP for configuration/management of a device. This happened
because of the problem of how to manage disparate devices from different
manufacturers in a common management platform.

So, what do you need to accomplish?

-- 
Brian Lloyd
Lloyd Aviation
706 Flightline Drive
Spring Branch, TX 78070
br...@lloyd.aero
+1.210.802-8FLY (1.210.802-8359)
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Re: [time-nuts] Homemade GPS Receiver

2014-09-26 Thread Dr. David Kirkby (Kirkby Microwave Ltd)
On 26 September 2014 13:52, Azelio Boriani azelio.bori...@gmail.com wrote:
 From gpsinformation.net:

 In the frequency allocation filing the L1 C/A power is listed as 25.6
 Watts.  The Antenna gain is listed at 13 dBi.  Thus, based on the
 frequency allocation  filing, the power would be about 500 Watts (27
 dBW).

 Now, the free space path loss from 21000 km is about 182 dB.  Take the
 500 Watts (27 dBW) and subtract the free space path loss (27 - 182)
 and you get  -155 dBW. The end of life spec is -160 dBW, which leaves
 a 5 dB margin.

I have not checked your figures, but assuming they are right, the -155
dBW would be based on a receiver antenna with 0 dBi gain, since that
is what the free space path loss assumes. Any lossless antenna will
have a peak gain of  0 dBi.

 And if you really get into it, you'll discover ALL of the following
 represent the same approximate signal strength for GPS on the face of
 the earth (m stands for milliwatts and m2 stands for meters squared):

 -160 dBW, -130 dBm, -135 dBW/m2, -105 dBm/m2, -223 dBW/Hz, -163
 dBW/MHz, -193 dBm/Hz, -198 dBW/m2/Hz, -138 dBW/m2/MHz

As I say, without stating the properties of the receiving antenna,
absolute power levels are not a sensible unit.

Dave
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Re: [time-nuts] Homemade GPS Receiver

2014-09-26 Thread Brian Lloyd
On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 4:07 AM, Dr. David Kirkby (Kirkby Microwave Ltd) 
drkir...@kirkbymicrowave.co.uk wrote:

 On 17 Sep 2014 23:38, Peter Putnam n...@sbcglobal.net wrote:
 
  Greetings,
 
  The link below describes a homemade GPS receiver.
 
  It is presented in a detailed and elegant manner that is certain to
 appeal to this reflector's subscribers.
 
  Peter
 
 
  http://www.aholme.co.uk/GPS/Main.htm

 I don't understand the units of signal strength

 The L1 carrier is spread over a 2 MHz bandwidth and its strength at the
 Earth's surface is -130 dBm. Thermal noise power in the same bandwidth is
 -111 dBm

 Then goes on to talk about the signal being 20 dB below the noise.

 Unless the -130 dBm is over the whole surface area of the earth,  which I
 doubt, the units make no sense to me. The units of signal strength should
 be V/m, A/m or W/square metre.

 The noise power should be in Watts or dBm. So taking the difference (19 dB,
 which is approximately 20 dB) between these figures seems odd to me.


I think you may be confusing field strength with signal strength. What
comes out of the feed-line and reaches the antenna connector at the
receiver, i.e. signal strength, is indeed measured in watts and can
therefore be compared directly with thermal noise power to produce an
effective S/N.

The antenna itself subtends an effective area (aperture) on the surface
of a theoretical sphere where the emitter is at the center. So the units of
area found in the field strength, i.e. the m^2 in W/m^2, are canceled by
the units of the effective area of the antenna, leaving only units of power
to appear at the feedline connection.

Every unit tells a story.

-- 
Brian Lloyd
Lloyd Aviation
706 Flightline Drive
Spring Branch, TX 78070
br...@lloyd.aero
+1.210.802-8FLY (1.210.802-8359)
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Re: [time-nuts] Homemade GPS Receiver

2014-09-26 Thread Henry Hallam
On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 8:25 AM, Dr. David Kirkby (Kirkby Microwave
Ltd) drkir...@kirkbymicrowave.co.uk wrote:
 As I say, without stating the properties of the receiving antenna,
 absolute power levels are not a sensible unit.

Indeed, there is an implicit assumption of a ~omnidirectional
(hemisphere-pattern) antenna, with a typical effective gain around 1
dBi.

Since the GPS signals come from all parts of the sky this is pretty
much required, unless you're using fancy beam steering techniques.

Perhaps slightly sloppy terminology but the meaning is clear, to me anyway :)

Henry
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Re: [time-nuts] Homemade GPS Receiver

2014-09-26 Thread Hal Murray

he...@pericynthion.org said:
 Since the GPS signals come from all parts of the sky this is pretty much
 required, unless you're using fancy beam steering techniques. 

How hard is the beam steering relative to everything else?


-- 
These are my opinions.  I hate spam.



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Re: [time-nuts] SMTP with Trimble Thunderbolt-E

2014-09-26 Thread Chris Albertson
The simple, cheap and easy what to do this is to get a cheap PC of any
kind.  Perhaps a 15 year old notebook PC.  Then connect the serial port on
the Thunderbolt to the serial port on the PC.  (This is a good reason to
buy a way-old PC notebook because those had real serial ports.   Lacking a
serial port, use a USB to serial dongle.)

Then install an OS like BSD or Linux on the PC and you are done.  You can
then manage the Thunderbolt by remotely logging into the PC and using a
terminal emulator to get to the serial port.  It's pretty simple and you
will likely find other things to connect to the PC or run on it, like maybe
NTP and use it for a low-end web or file server.  You can get a good enough
notebook cheap or a good enough desktop for free.


On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 6:17 AM, Luc Gaudin lgau...@naelcom.com wrote:

 Hello,

 I need to have remotely access to Trimble Thunderbolt-E to manage it.
 I first sort out the physical (network) parts to get the Serial port out
 on the network (unit CSE-H53N from Sollae Systems).
 For management I am looking to use SNMP.
 Is there any system capable to convert the serial information from the
 Trimble Thunderbolt to SNMP ?
 Some people are talking about proxy agent.
 Is any can help ?

 Best regards

 Luc Gaudin
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 https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
 and follow the instructions there.




-- 

Chris Albertson
Redondo Beach, California
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Re: [time-nuts] Homemade GPS Receiver

2014-09-26 Thread Alexander Pummer
it is relative complicated, since you need to look multiple satellites 
almost in the same time

73
Alex

On 9/26/2014 5:12 PM, Hal Murray wrote:

he...@pericynthion.org said:

Since the GPS signals come from all parts of the sky this is pretty much
required, unless you're using fancy beam steering techniques.

How hard is the beam steering relative to everything else?




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