2008/12/22 Mike Naruta AA8K <[email protected]>:
> What if all three are different from each other?
>
> Or, if two agree, how do you know that the
> two are not both wrong?
>
> If you have 30 clocks and 20 say one time while
> 10 say another time, do you go with the majority?
>
> Is there not a small probability that the 10 are correct?

In that case, who cares about 'their' time, I have my own here and
it's about five'ish now :-)

Statistical probability of measured data from each clock measured over
a long period. At any one time you should be able to predict the
likelihood that certain data is probably going to be correct. I don't
think you can state what is correct just given a single time-slice of
data from a number of clocks.

73, Steve - JAKDTTNW
-- 
Steve Rooke - ZL3TUV & G8KVD
Omnium finis imminet

_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.

Reply via email to