Re: [time-nuts] Lock-in amplifier as wwvb receiver

2012-07-14 Thread David Kirkby
On 14 July 2012 04:04, Bill Fuqua wlfuq...@uky.edu wrote:
Has anyone ever used an Lock-in Amplifier such as
 a PAR HR-8 or later models as part of a receiving
 system for WWVB? These are mostly used in detecting
 weak signals in noise in scientific experiments. Some have used
 the analog output to phase lock a voltage controlled
 oscillator to the  input signal.


 73
 Bill wa4lav

Slightly different, but here's a video of someone using an Standard
Research lock in amp as an AM receiver.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8R9bbdAdUHg

This particular model is Standard's RF lock in, which IIRC works to
200 MHz. But 60 kHz should be within the range of most lock-in amps.

Dave

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Re: [time-nuts] Phase modulation detection/NIST plan

2012-07-14 Thread Magnus Danielson

On 07/14/2012 06:47 AM, Brooke Clarke wrote:

Hi:

The key thing GPS is lacking is Daylight Savings Time.

WWV  WWVB have the DST bits that allow a clock to show the local time.


One reason GPS doesn't have it is that it is not coordinated globally. 
For instance, US is not shifting DST at the same time as Europe. There 
is no obvious right here.


Keeping track of the time-zones and their changes keeps the time-zone 
folks alert and requires a constant maintenance. Keeping it in the GPS
signal would require mapping of position to time-zone area, and only 
then it could be keyed down. These mappings does not stay stable, so any 
downlink format would need to describe them and would take considerable 
time. This is why it is best managed by the user himself.


Cheers,
Magnus

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Re: [time-nuts] Phase modulation detection/NIST plan

2012-07-14 Thread Bob Camp
Hi

I think the answer to how many places would it be used is to simply count the 
number of things that have the wrong time on them each time the power burps. 
There are maybe a dozen gizmos like that in this room (yes I'm in the kitchen).

Bob


On Jul 14, 2012, at 12:41 AM, Hal Murray wrote:

 
 d...@dieconsulting.com said:
 There are innumerable applications for low cost low power human level 1
 second accurate time of day in modern electronic systems - examples are
 traffic lights and school crossing signs and water sprinklers and street
 lights and other outdoor lighting and many others... these systems are not
 normally network connected  and there is no current wide area technology
 short of power hungry GPS with its weak signals and relatively high cost and
 difficult reception from many locations to do this. 
 
 How many of those are really interested in low power?
 
 The only one I see on your list that might run off batteries is water 
 sprinklers.  All the rest use enough power that a GPS unit would be in the 
 noise.
 
 I think the main argument for WWVB receivers vs GPS receivers would be cost.  
 In either case, you have to get the antenna outside the metal enclosure and 
 that may be the major cost.  (I suppose a sprinkler controller could be 
 mounted in a plastic enclosure.)
 
 school crossing signs is another possibility.  In the last year or two, 
 I've seen several setups around here that have solar powered LEDs mounted at 
 street level at pedestrian crossings.  They are great at night but not so 
 great during the day.  (But during the day the pedestrians are easier to see.)
 
 
 
 -- 
 These are my opinions.  I hate spam.
 
 
 
 
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Re: [time-nuts] Phase modulation detection/NIST plan

2012-07-14 Thread J. Forster
I don't see why school crossing signs, water sprinklers, street or outdoor
lighting need 1 second timing. Ten minutes, or a photocell, would be more
than adequate.

Synchronized traffic lights, perhaps. But there are other cheaper, ways of
doing that like a simple radio link.

-John

===



 d...@dieconsulting.com said:
 There are innumerable applications for low cost low power human level 1
 second accurate time of day in modern electronic systems - examples are
 traffic lights and school crossing signs and water sprinklers and street
 lights and other outdoor lighting and many others... these systems are
 not
 normally network connected  and there is no current wide area technology
 short of power hungry GPS with its weak signals and relatively high cost
 and
 difficult reception from many locations to do this.

 How many of those are really interested in low power?

 The only one I see on your list that might run off batteries is water
 sprinklers.  All the rest use enough power that a GPS unit would be in the
 noise.

 I think the main argument for WWVB receivers vs GPS receivers would be
 cost.
 In either case, you have to get the antenna outside the metal enclosure
 and
 that may be the major cost.  (I suppose a sprinkler controller could be
 mounted in a plastic enclosure.)

 school crossing signs is another possibility.  In the last year or two,
 I've seen several setups around here that have solar powered LEDs mounted
 at
 street level at pedestrian crossings.  They are great at night but not so
 great during the day.  (But during the day the pedestrians are easier to
 see.)



 --
 These are my opinions.  I hate spam.




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[time-nuts] Sigem SGM5610 GPS module AKA MKN5610

2012-07-14 Thread GandalfG8
Just out of interest, does anyone know why the Sigem SGM5610 GPS  module, 
later rebranded as the Mobile Knowledge MKN5610, seems to  be very popular?
 
I can't find a spec for 1PPS accuracy in either the data sheet or  manual 
so wouldn't expect too much demand for timing purposes, but of all the  files 
I've made available over the past few years via my Rapidshare account this  
one consistently tops the best seller list, and I don't recall posting 
notice  of its availability anywhere other than here. 
 
Demand for most files tails off as they get uploaded elsewhere and become  
more generally available but this one just continues to flow out the  door 
at a steady trickle, it's up to 260 downloads now and with no signs of  it 
stopping anytime soon:-)
 
Regards
 
Nigel
GM8PZR
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Re: [time-nuts] Sigem SGM5610 GPS module AKA MKN5610

2012-07-14 Thread Azelio Boriani
Yes, interesting... I have never downloaded but maybe in those files there
is a utility, a viewer, a document that is useful with other GPS receivers
or even for other purposes.

On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 4:13 PM, gandal...@aol.com wrote:

 Just out of interest, does anyone know why the Sigem SGM5610 GPS  module,
 later rebranded as the Mobile Knowledge MKN5610, seems to  be very popular?

 I can't find a spec for 1PPS accuracy in either the data sheet or  manual
 so wouldn't expect too much demand for timing purposes, but of all the
  files
 I've made available over the past few years via my Rapidshare account this
 one consistently tops the best seller list, and I don't recall posting
 notice  of its availability anywhere other than here.

 Demand for most files tails off as they get uploaded elsewhere and become
 more generally available but this one just continues to flow out the  door
 at a steady trickle, it's up to 260 downloads now and with no signs of  it
 stopping anytime soon:-)

 Regards

 Nigel
 GM8PZR
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Re: [time-nuts] Sigem SGM5610 GPS module AKA MKN5610

2012-07-14 Thread Azelio Boriani
Oh, is it the 48MB .PDF I have just seen? Then no utilities... this is very
strange.

On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 4:22 PM, Azelio Boriani azelio.bori...@screen.itwrote:

 Yes, interesting... I have never downloaded but maybe in those files there
 is a utility, a viewer, a document that is useful with other GPS receivers
 or even for other purposes.


 On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 4:13 PM, gandal...@aol.com wrote:

 Just out of interest, does anyone know why the Sigem SGM5610 GPS  module,
 later rebranded as the Mobile Knowledge MKN5610, seems to  be very
 popular?

 I can't find a spec for 1PPS accuracy in either the data sheet or  manual
 so wouldn't expect too much demand for timing purposes, but of all the
  files
 I've made available over the past few years via my Rapidshare account this
 one consistently tops the best seller list, and I don't recall posting
 notice  of its availability anywhere other than here.

 Demand for most files tails off as they get uploaded elsewhere and become
 more generally available but this one just continues to flow out the  door
 at a steady trickle, it's up to 260 downloads now and with no signs of  it
 stopping anytime soon:-)

 Regards

 Nigel
 GM8PZR
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[time-nuts] L/H Screen Resolution setting

2012-07-14 Thread Brad Dye
I am a bit confused about Lady Heather's settings for screen resolution.

/vc=rowsXcols - custom screen size (e.g. /vc=1200x800)

My laptop's native resolution is 1280 x 800 pixels but pixels and rows  cols 
are different measurements right? Is there a correlation?

I am getting the scaled down window and I can't get the satellite 
azimuth/elevation plot.

Any coaching would be appreciated.

73
Brad Dye, K9IQY
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Re: [time-nuts] Sigem SGM5610 GPS module AKA MKN5610

2012-07-14 Thread GandalfG8
Not sure what you've found that's 48MB, this one is only 1650KB:-)

_http://rapidshare.com/files/317504924/MKN5610_060502.pdf_ 
(http://rapidshare.com/files/317504924/MKN5610_060502.pdf) 

It does mention a software utility called ADK View, but I've never  found a 
copy of that.
 
Regards
 
Nigel
GM8PZR

--
In a message dated 14/07/2012 15:25:45 GMT  Daylight Time, 
azelio.bori...@screen.it writes:

Oh, is it the 48MB .PDF I have just seen? Then no utilities... this is  very
strange. 
 
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Re: [time-nuts] Solar flare alert...not quite

2012-07-14 Thread Alan Melia
It's not actually a flare.that has been and gobe it a great bif glob of 
plasma, ejected by the same region. Spaceweather.com has a reputation for 
over-hyping these CME events. I could cause problems but there are a lot of 
conditions to be met before it is a disaster. Enjoy the aurora :-))


Alan
G3NYK
- Original Message - 
From: Mark Sims hol...@hotmail.com

To: time-nuts@febo.com
Sent: Saturday, July 14, 2012 3:50 AM
Subject: [time-nuts] Solar flare alert




There was a blurb on the news tonight about a big honkin' solar flare that 
is due to arrive around 6:00 AM tomorrow morning.   It's supposed to be 
strong enough to produce auroras visible as far south as the Gulf of 
Mexico and to mess up GPS...

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Re: [time-nuts] Sigem SGM5610 GPS module AKA MKN5610

2012-07-14 Thread Azelio Boriani
Using the FILECROP searching tool a .PDF of 48MB comes out... maybe the
size indication is wrong.
On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 4:42 PM, gandal...@aol.com wrote:

 Not sure what you've found that's 48MB, this one is only 1650KB:-)

 _http://rapidshare.com/files/317504924/MKN5610_060502.pdf_
 (http://rapidshare.com/files/317504924/MKN5610_060502.pdf)

 It does mention a software utility called ADK View, but I've never  found a
 copy of that.

 Regards

 Nigel
 GM8PZR

 --
 In a message dated 14/07/2012 15:25:45 GMT  Daylight Time,
 azelio.bori...@screen.it writes:

 Oh, is it the 48MB .PDF I have just seen? Then no utilities... this is
  very
 strange.

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Re: [time-nuts] Solar flare alert

2012-07-14 Thread Alan Melia
Joe, Cellphone frequencies are little affected by ionospheric effects, so I 
would be surprised if that was an effect though GPS is a different matter, 
or sat-phone.


Alan
G3NYK

- Original Message - 
From: Joseph Gray jg...@zianet.com
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement 
time-nuts@febo.com

Sent: Saturday, July 14, 2012 4:40 AM
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Solar flare alert



I read about it yesterday. I suspect that we may already be seeing
some radio interference. At work this afternoon, my cell phone lost
signal entirely a few times. Although I don't get a great signal at
work, it has never lost signal completely before.

Joe Gray
W5JG

On Fri, Jul 13, 2012 at 8:50 PM, Mark Sims hol...@hotmail.com wrote:


There was a blurb on the news tonight about a big honkin' solar flare 
that is due to arrive around 6:00 AM tomorrow morning.   It's supposed to 
be strong enough to produce auroras visible as far south as the Gulf of 
Mexico and to mess up GPS...

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Re: [time-nuts] Solar flare alert...not quite

2012-07-14 Thread Said Jackson
Looks like this flare was a non-event:

http://www.jackson-labs.com/images/gpsstat.htm



On Jul 14, 2012, at 7:49, Alan Melia alan.me...@btinternet.com wrote:

 It's not actually a flare.that has been and gobe it a great bif glob of 
 plasma, ejected by the same region. Spaceweather.com has a reputation for 
 over-hyping these CME events. I could cause problems but there are a lot of 
 conditions to be met before it is a disaster. Enjoy the aurora :-))
 
 Alan
 G3NYK
 - Original Message - From: Mark Sims hol...@hotmail.com
 To: time-nuts@febo.com
 Sent: Saturday, July 14, 2012 3:50 AM
 Subject: [time-nuts] Solar flare alert
 
 
 
 There was a blurb on the news tonight about a big honkin' solar flare that 
 is due to arrive around 6:00 AM tomorrow morning.   It's supposed to be 
 strong enough to produce auroras visible as far south as the Gulf of Mexico 
 and to mess up GPS...
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Re: [time-nuts] Solar flare alert

2012-07-14 Thread Joseph Gray
Perhaps some of the cellular bands aren't affected, perhaps some are.
I don't know the specific cause of yesterday's loss.. GPS uses around
1200/1500 MHz. The phone in question uses 850/1900 Mhz bands, so I
think we're in the neighborhood.

Joe Gray
W5JG

On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 9:35 AM, Alan Melia alan.me...@btinternet.com wrote:
 Joe, Cellphone frequencies are little affected by ionospheric effects, so I
 would be surprised if that was an effect though GPS is a different matter,
 or sat-phone.

 Alan
 G3NYK

 - Original Message - From: Joseph Gray jg...@zianet.com
 To: Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement
 time-nuts@febo.com
 Sent: Saturday, July 14, 2012 4:40 AM
 Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Solar flare alert



 I read about it yesterday. I suspect that we may already be seeing
 some radio interference. At work this afternoon, my cell phone lost
 signal entirely a few times. Although I don't get a great signal at
 work, it has never lost signal completely before.

 Joe Gray
 W5JG

 On Fri, Jul 13, 2012 at 8:50 PM, Mark Sims hol...@hotmail.com wrote:


 There was a blurb on the news tonight about a big honkin' solar flare
 that is due to arrive around 6:00 AM tomorrow morning.   It's supposed to be
 strong enough to produce auroras visible as far south as the Gulf of Mexico
 and to mess up GPS...
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Re: [time-nuts] Solar flare alert

2012-07-14 Thread Jim Lux

On 7/14/12 9:19 AM, Joseph Gray wrote:

Perhaps some of the cellular bands aren't affected, perhaps some are.
I don't know the specific cause of yesterday's loss.. GPS uses around
1200/1500 MHz. The phone in question uses 850/1900 Mhz bands, so I
think we're in the neighborhood.



GPS signals pass through the ionosphere which greatly affected by solar 
weather.


Terrestrial cellphone signals do not pass through the ionosphere, so 
flares don't necessarily change things.  There is anecdotal evidence, 
though, that solar activity can change the environmental RF background 
noise level, and that could have an effect on cellphone link margins.




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[time-nuts] WWVB a different approach to d-bpsk-r (cheating)

2012-07-14 Thread paul swed
OK have been doing a lot of experimenting.
I was curious what is the GPS tick in relationship to wwvb. Especially
since it is a reliable 1 sec marker.
Using a Tbolt since everyone has one on the list. ;-) And monitoring the 10
us tick to the wwvb 60 Khz carrier on a scope. Amazingly and over at least
2 hours now, the rising cycle of 60 Khz aligns to the 10 us Tbolt tick
rising edge. Expected some form of drift.

Would not have actually thought there should be such a relationship or its
truly pot luck today.
WWVB today is also not running bpsk.

Should such a relationship actually exist?
There is a clue in a 1985 article in ham radio magazine.
It went something like this. At any given instant the 60 Khz may jitter.
But for every 1 sec period there will be exactly 60,000 cycles.

If it does stay aligned, then the cheating d-bpsk-r gets to be interesting
and very implementable.

The approach using a micro to sample a squared up 60 Khz after the Tbolt
tic.
Perform 2-3 1 usec samples in the leading 90 degree signal.
Decide is it a 0 or 1 phase.
Select a inverted or non inverted 60 Khz into the output path to maintain a
constant phase 60 Khz for the old recvrs.

Sure its cheating. But if this relationship is real I should be able to
implement the answer very quickly as a proof point.

Have not heard if the NIST testing is completed or when the next one is.
But for today all of the rcvrs are working just fine.
Regards
Paul
WB8TSL
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Re: [time-nuts] Phase modulation detection/NIST plan

2012-07-14 Thread David I. Emery
On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 06:15:14AM -0700, J. Forster wrote:
 I don't see why school crossing signs, water sprinklers, street or outdoor
 lighting need 1 second timing. Ten minutes, or a photocell, would be more
 than adequate.

While there are many many other applications, the issue for most
of these devices is not 1 second accuracy, but automagic setting of the
time without operator intervention or manual procedure required. For
many ordinary folks the always slightly different push button gyrations
required to set the time on a device with limited buttons and display
are all too often a complete barrier to getting the time set right (this
is the VCR blinking 12:00AM phenomenon).   And in outside environments
clock oscillator thermal behavior will ensure something preset to the
correct will wander pretty far out quite quickly  (plus of course DST
needs to be set too).   And working with only approximate time is 
another source of terrible confusion for users... if they set it to go
off at exactly 11 PM and it goes off at 11:08 PM they are likely going
to be confused and frustrated... especially if difficult or even
impossible steps are required to correct the time.

Photocells don't work for situations where the desired on or off
times are civil times (not turning on the water sprinklers until 11 PM
for example or turning off the tennis court lights at 10 PM)... at best
it takes lots of software to convert light and dark from them to
anything approximating a 10 minute accurate estimate of the time of day
and shadows and sun angles and so forth ensure that this is never going
to be particularly accurate.


 Synchronized traffic lights, perhaps. But there are other cheaper, ways of
 doing that like a simple radio link.

I refuse to believe that a reliable mile or more range RF
link would be cheaper than a loopstick and maybe a couple of passives
tied to pins on a SOC chip...  and there are all those situations
where even a mile isn't enough or obstacles or RFI block ISM band
links.


-- 
  Dave Emery N1PRE/AE, d...@dieconsulting.com  DIE Consulting, Weston, Mass 
02493
An empty zombie mind with a forlorn barely readable weatherbeaten
'For Rent' sign still vainly flapping outside on the weed encrusted pole - in 
celebration of what could have been, but wasn't and is not to be now either.


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Re: [time-nuts] WWVB a different approach to d-bpsk-r (cheating)

2012-07-14 Thread Bob Camp
Hi

The zero crossing is very arbitrary. If it's correct at the transmit site, it 
will then be off everywhere else by the speed of light / distance. You will 
appear to be correct  once every wavelength away from Colorado (roughly every 3 
miles). You won't really be correct because you are looking at a different zero 
crossing.

As long as you don't have sunset or sunrise between you and the transmitter,  
WWVB is reasonably stable. At night you will get more signal, but also can have 
some skywave stuff in the mix. 

Bob
   
On Jul 14, 2012, at 3:50 PM, paul swed wrote:

 OK have been doing a lot of experimenting.
 I was curious what is the GPS tick in relationship to wwvb. Especially
 since it is a reliable 1 sec marker.
 Using a Tbolt since everyone has one on the list. ;-) And monitoring the 10
 us tick to the wwvb 60 Khz carrier on a scope. Amazingly and over at least
 2 hours now, the rising cycle of 60 Khz aligns to the 10 us Tbolt tick
 rising edge. Expected some form of drift.
 
 Would not have actually thought there should be such a relationship or its
 truly pot luck today.
 WWVB today is also not running bpsk.
 
 Should such a relationship actually exist?
 There is a clue in a 1985 article in ham radio magazine.
 It went something like this. At any given instant the 60 Khz may jitter.
 But for every 1 sec period there will be exactly 60,000 cycles.
 
 If it does stay aligned, then the cheating d-bpsk-r gets to be interesting
 and very implementable.
 
 The approach using a micro to sample a squared up 60 Khz after the Tbolt
 tic.
 Perform 2-3 1 usec samples in the leading 90 degree signal.
 Decide is it a 0 or 1 phase.
 Select a inverted or non inverted 60 Khz into the output path to maintain a
 constant phase 60 Khz for the old recvrs.
 
 Sure its cheating. But if this relationship is real I should be able to
 implement the answer very quickly as a proof point.
 
 Have not heard if the NIST testing is completed or when the next one is.
 But for today all of the rcvrs are working just fine.
 Regards
 Paul
 WB8TSL
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Re: [time-nuts] WWVB a different approach to d-bpsk-r (cheating)

2012-07-14 Thread paul swed
Bob
Yes nights are bad for me, east coast and MSF interference.
So it could be any number of 60 KHz crossing its just odd it lined up the
way it did and I double confirmed that I was not doing something silly like
using alternate triggers.

Very careful analysis does show a 1-2 us jitter and at diurnal shift I
really expect something to change it has to.
Regards
Paul.

On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 4:32 PM, Bob Camp li...@rtty.us wrote:

 Hi

 The zero crossing is very arbitrary. If it's correct at the transmit
 site, it will then be off everywhere else by the speed of light / distance.
 You will appear to be correct  once every wavelength away from Colorado
 (roughly every 3 miles). You won't really be correct because you are
 looking at a different zero crossing.

 As long as you don't have sunset or sunrise between you and the
 transmitter,  WWVB is reasonably stable. At night you will get more signal,
 but also can have some skywave stuff in the mix.

 Bob

 On Jul 14, 2012, at 3:50 PM, paul swed wrote:

  OK have been doing a lot of experimenting.
  I was curious what is the GPS tick in relationship to wwvb. Especially
  since it is a reliable 1 sec marker.
  Using a Tbolt since everyone has one on the list. ;-) And monitoring the
 10
  us tick to the wwvb 60 Khz carrier on a scope. Amazingly and over at
 least
  2 hours now, the rising cycle of 60 Khz aligns to the 10 us Tbolt tick
  rising edge. Expected some form of drift.
 
  Would not have actually thought there should be such a relationship or
 its
  truly pot luck today.
  WWVB today is also not running bpsk.
 
  Should such a relationship actually exist?
  There is a clue in a 1985 article in ham radio magazine.
  It went something like this. At any given instant the 60 Khz may jitter.
  But for every 1 sec period there will be exactly 60,000 cycles.
 
  If it does stay aligned, then the cheating d-bpsk-r gets to be
 interesting
  and very implementable.
 
  The approach using a micro to sample a squared up 60 Khz after the Tbolt
  tic.
  Perform 2-3 1 usec samples in the leading 90 degree signal.
  Decide is it a 0 or 1 phase.
  Select a inverted or non inverted 60 Khz into the output path to
 maintain a
  constant phase 60 Khz for the old recvrs.
 
  Sure its cheating. But if this relationship is real I should be able to
  implement the answer very quickly as a proof point.
 
  Have not heard if the NIST testing is completed or when the next one is.
  But for today all of the rcvrs are working just fine.
  Regards
  Paul
  WB8TSL
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Re: [time-nuts] WWVB a different approach to d-bpsk-r (cheating)

2012-07-14 Thread Magnus Danielson

Paul,

On 07/14/2012 10:56 PM, paul swed wrote:

Bob
Yes nights are bad for me, east coast and MSF interference.
So it could be any number of 60 KHz crossing its just odd it lined up the
way it did and I double confirmed that I was not doing something silly like
using alternate triggers.


As your house and antenna rig (nice antenna by the way) lies 2795060 m 
away from the WWVB transmitter house (approximation for north and south 
antenna phase-center to get a first measure) and considering that each 
60 kHz cycle takes about 5 km (4996.54 m will do for approximation) it 
is not strange that they line up for you, as you are 559.399 cycles away 
from the WWVB antenna, and there are numbers of factors I haven't 
corrected for, like actual speed of light. How much ground wave are you 
seeing?


Cheers,
Magnus


Very careful analysis does show a 1-2 us jitter and at diurnal shift I
really expect something to change it has to.


The amount of ionospheric reflection will most probably be part of it.

Cheers,
Magnus

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Re: [time-nuts] WWVB a different approach to d-bpsk-r (cheating)

2012-07-14 Thread Bob Camp
Hi

Well between now and midnight, you will completely loose signal at least once. 
It's a pretty dramatic amplitude dip as sunset gets right to the wrong place.

Bob

On Jul 14, 2012, at 4:56 PM, paul swed wrote:

 Bob
 Yes nights are bad for me, east coast and MSF interference.
 So it could be any number of 60 KHz crossing its just odd it lined up the
 way it did and I double confirmed that I was not doing something silly like
 using alternate triggers.
 
 Very careful analysis does show a 1-2 us jitter and at diurnal shift I
 really expect something to change it has to.
 Regards
 Paul.
 
 On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 4:32 PM, Bob Camp li...@rtty.us wrote:
 
 Hi
 
 The zero crossing is very arbitrary. If it's correct at the transmit
 site, it will then be off everywhere else by the speed of light / distance.
 You will appear to be correct  once every wavelength away from Colorado
 (roughly every 3 miles). You won't really be correct because you are
 looking at a different zero crossing.
 
 As long as you don't have sunset or sunrise between you and the
 transmitter,  WWVB is reasonably stable. At night you will get more signal,
 but also can have some skywave stuff in the mix.
 
 Bob
 
 On Jul 14, 2012, at 3:50 PM, paul swed wrote:
 
 OK have been doing a lot of experimenting.
 I was curious what is the GPS tick in relationship to wwvb. Especially
 since it is a reliable 1 sec marker.
 Using a Tbolt since everyone has one on the list. ;-) And monitoring the
 10
 us tick to the wwvb 60 Khz carrier on a scope. Amazingly and over at
 least
 2 hours now, the rising cycle of 60 Khz aligns to the 10 us Tbolt tick
 rising edge. Expected some form of drift.
 
 Would not have actually thought there should be such a relationship or
 its
 truly pot luck today.
 WWVB today is also not running bpsk.
 
 Should such a relationship actually exist?
 There is a clue in a 1985 article in ham radio magazine.
 It went something like this. At any given instant the 60 Khz may jitter.
 But for every 1 sec period there will be exactly 60,000 cycles.
 
 If it does stay aligned, then the cheating d-bpsk-r gets to be
 interesting
 and very implementable.
 
 The approach using a micro to sample a squared up 60 Khz after the Tbolt
 tic.
 Perform 2-3 1 usec samples in the leading 90 degree signal.
 Decide is it a 0 or 1 phase.
 Select a inverted or non inverted 60 Khz into the output path to
 maintain a
 constant phase 60 Khz for the old recvrs.
 
 Sure its cheating. But if this relationship is real I should be able to
 implement the answer very quickly as a proof point.
 
 Have not heard if the NIST testing is completed or when the next one is.
 But for today all of the rcvrs are working just fine.
 Regards
 Paul
 WB8TSL
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[time-nuts] WWVB and Free Democracies Survival

2012-07-14 Thread Perry Sandeen
GM List,

What has not been mentioned so far is national security needs of the democratic 
nations of the world for uninterrupted accurate time/frequency information that 
is not subject to interference or destruction by those nations diametrically 
opposed to personal freedom.

The United States GPS system is an unparalleled success providing inexpensive 
time and frequency standards worldwide and it is relied on for innumerable 
critical tasks.

But it requires using satellites.   They are subject to destruction or 
degradation from the ground over the sovereign territory by those rouge states 
that would be so inclined.  The ability to destroy a satellite from the earth 
has already ben demonstrated by one nation.  There are numerous reports of 
shall we say *Malicious Tinkering* on other satellites. 

Setting aside the enormous expense, technical difficulties such as the need for 
sophisticated and extremely limited amount of rocket launches available make 
the system unsustainable to GPS satellites continued destruction or degradation 
from a land based source.

The need for a strong viable redundancy is totally unfathomed upon those in the 
current applicable leadership of the US government.  One proof of this was the 
shutting down of Loran C to save $35 M a year in a spending amount of several 
trillion dollars a year.

But Loran C gave us the best and cheapest redundant alternative to GPS and 
perhaps might be revived.

A viable WWVB signal, while a very poor third choice, provides an alternate 
backup for GPS and in a strange way that could provide protection at least for 
the USA GPS system.  Here’s why.  It still is very difficult and expensive to 
damage/destroy satellites.   That there are viable alternatives based on 
unassailable sovereign territory may discourage the rogue states from making 
such an effort.

WWVB has a historically transmitted power of 50KW. This is the maximum AM 
broadcast band signal transmission power allowed in the USA IIRC for about 75 
years.  NIST sates the WWVB antennas having efficiencies of around 57 per cent.

Improved transmitting tube technology would easily allow more output power.  
For example Riydah, Saudi Arabia transmits 2 MW on 1201 KHz and is heard often 
in North America with a R-390A receiver.

So a massive increase from 50KW to say for example to 500KW and or the 
relocation of the transmitter and antennas to a more geographical central U.S. 
state location (such as Iowa) could extend the 100 micro-volt per meter signal 
level radiation pattern over the entire western hemisphere and provide a high 
enough micro-volt per meter signal that receivers could phase lock on the 
signal in North America and would not be subject to problems of diurnal shift 
or the new modulation scheme.

Baring an improved WWVB signal strength us time nuts may be forced to install 
20 to 30 ft. loop antennas when the new system is finalized for an adequate 
signal.

Regards,

Perry Sandeen


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Re: [time-nuts] WWVB and Free Democracies Survival

2012-07-14 Thread paul swed
Perry you mean like the 10' X 10' loop I put up?
It has about 800 ft of wire.
Brang the daytime signal fro 30 uv to an easy 60 +.
Compared to a 2.5 ft loop.
Yes higher power would be good.
Regards
paul

On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 9:43 PM, Perry Sandeen sandee...@yahoo.com wrote:

 GM List,

 What has not been mentioned so far is national security needs of the
 democratic nations of the world for uninterrupted accurate time/frequency
 information that is not subject to interference or destruction by those
 nations diametrically opposed to personal freedom.

 The United States GPS system is an unparalleled success providing
 inexpensive time and frequency standards worldwide and it is relied on for
 innumerable critical tasks.

 But it requires using satellites.   They are subject to destruction or
 degradation from the ground over the sovereign territory by those rouge
 states that would be so inclined.  The ability to destroy a satellite from
 the earth has already ben demonstrated by one nation.  There are numerous
 reports of shall we say *Malicious Tinkering* on other satellites.

 Setting aside the enormous expense, technical difficulties such as the
 need for sophisticated and extremely limited amount of rocket launches
 available make the system unsustainable to GPS satellites continued
 destruction or degradation from a land based source.

 The need for a strong viable redundancy is totally unfathomed upon those
 in the current applicable leadership of the US government.  One proof of
 this was the shutting down of Loran C to save $35 M a year in a spending
 amount of several trillion dollars a year.

 But Loran C gave us the best and cheapest redundant alternative to GPS and
 perhaps might be revived.

 A viable WWVB signal, while a very poor third choice, provides an
 alternate backup for GPS and in a strange way that could provide protection
 at least for the USA GPS system.  Here’s why.  It still is very difficult
 and expensive to damage/destroy satellites.   That there are viable
 alternatives based on unassailable sovereign territory may discourage the
 rogue states from making such an effort.

 WWVB has a historically transmitted power of 50KW. This is the maximum AM
 broadcast band signal transmission power allowed in the USA IIRC for about
 75 years.  NIST sates the WWVB antennas having efficiencies of around 57
 per cent.

 Improved transmitting tube technology would easily allow more output
 power.  For example Riydah, Saudi Arabia transmits 2 MW on 1201 KHz and is
 heard often in North America with a R-390A receiver.

 So a massive increase from 50KW to say for example to 500KW and or the
 relocation of the transmitter and antennas to a more geographical central
 U.S. state location (such as Iowa) could extend the 100 micro-volt per
 meter signal level radiation pattern over the entire western hemisphere and
 provide a high enough micro-volt per meter signal that receivers could
 phase lock on the signal in North America and would not be subject to
 problems of diurnal shift or the new modulation scheme.

 Baring an improved WWVB signal strength us time nuts may be forced to
 install 20 to 30 ft. loop antennas when the new system is finalized for an
 adequate signal.

 Regards,

 Perry Sandeen


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Re: [time-nuts] WWVB a different approach to d-bpsk-r (cheating)

2012-07-14 Thread paul swed
Might loose the signal not unusual and it did shift +5-8 us tonight aligned
to the diurnal shift.
So maybe this is not so crazy of an approach.
Regards
Paul

On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 5:53 PM, Bob Camp li...@rtty.us wrote:

 Hi

 Well between now and midnight, you will completely loose signal at least
 once. It's a pretty dramatic amplitude dip as sunset gets right to the
 wrong place.

 Bob

 On Jul 14, 2012, at 4:56 PM, paul swed wrote:

  Bob
  Yes nights are bad for me, east coast and MSF interference.
  So it could be any number of 60 KHz crossing its just odd it lined up the
  way it did and I double confirmed that I was not doing something silly
 like
  using alternate triggers.
 
  Very careful analysis does show a 1-2 us jitter and at diurnal shift I
  really expect something to change it has to.
  Regards
  Paul.
 
  On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 4:32 PM, Bob Camp li...@rtty.us wrote:
 
  Hi
 
  The zero crossing is very arbitrary. If it's correct at the transmit
  site, it will then be off everywhere else by the speed of light /
 distance.
  You will appear to be correct  once every wavelength away from Colorado
  (roughly every 3 miles). You won't really be correct because you are
  looking at a different zero crossing.
 
  As long as you don't have sunset or sunrise between you and the
  transmitter,  WWVB is reasonably stable. At night you will get more
 signal,
  but also can have some skywave stuff in the mix.
 
  Bob
 
  On Jul 14, 2012, at 3:50 PM, paul swed wrote:
 
  OK have been doing a lot of experimenting.
  I was curious what is the GPS tick in relationship to wwvb. Especially
  since it is a reliable 1 sec marker.
  Using a Tbolt since everyone has one on the list. ;-) And monitoring
 the
  10
  us tick to the wwvb 60 Khz carrier on a scope. Amazingly and over at
  least
  2 hours now, the rising cycle of 60 Khz aligns to the 10 us Tbolt tick
  rising edge. Expected some form of drift.
 
  Would not have actually thought there should be such a relationship or
  its
  truly pot luck today.
  WWVB today is also not running bpsk.
 
  Should such a relationship actually exist?
  There is a clue in a 1985 article in ham radio magazine.
  It went something like this. At any given instant the 60 Khz may
 jitter.
  But for every 1 sec period there will be exactly 60,000 cycles.
 
  If it does stay aligned, then the cheating d-bpsk-r gets to be
  interesting
  and very implementable.
 
  The approach using a micro to sample a squared up 60 Khz after the
 Tbolt
  tic.
  Perform 2-3 1 usec samples in the leading 90 degree signal.
  Decide is it a 0 or 1 phase.
  Select a inverted or non inverted 60 Khz into the output path to
  maintain a
  constant phase 60 Khz for the old recvrs.
 
  Sure its cheating. But if this relationship is real I should be able to
  implement the answer very quickly as a proof point.
 
  Have not heard if the NIST testing is completed or when the next one
 is.
  But for today all of the rcvrs are working just fine.
  Regards
  Paul
  WB8TSL
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Re: [time-nuts] WWVB and Free Democracies Survival

2012-07-14 Thread Chuck Forsberg WA7KGX N2469R

Offhand I'd estimate it would be easier for some bad guys
to put a crude A-bomb on top of a SCUD and put America
into the horse and buggy age with an EMP attack than to
take out a significant number of GPS satellites.

NLK in Washington state has been off the for almost
two months now.  Depending on which list one looks at,
NLK transmits on 24.8 with 300 to 1000 kilowatts.
Perhaps NLK could be retuned to send the WWVB signal.

--
Chuck Forsberg WA7KGX N2469R c...@omen.com   www.omen.com
Developer of Industrial ZMODEM(Tm) for Embedded Applications
  Omen Technology Inc  The High Reliability Software
10255 NW Old Cornelius Pass Portland OR 97231   503-614-0430




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