Chris Bridge wrote:
Hi ,
I was pointed to an Ebay seller who has an entire kit available (from China of course). Not knowing the product or pricing any better, can I get a comment on this link please? http://cgi.ebay.ca/Thunderbolt-PRECISION-GPS-10Mhz-1PPS-Standard-Easy-Kit_W0QQitemZ170344432395QQcmdZViewItemQQptZLH_DefaultDomain_0?hash=item27a951c30b&_trksid=p4634.c0.m14.l1262&_trkparms=|293%3A1|294%3A30 I hope I'm not breaking any rules here. I'm just trying to get the right thing at a half decent price. If the upcoming buy will include what I need, I can wait for it. I am worried about shipping and duty costs, UPS has proved to be a deadly foe in the past.

While that antenna isn't particularly good, it does get you up and running and as a starters kit you are getting a good start with that price. The Thunderbolts is a great start and probably suffice for many people. I am about to give one away together with a pair of counters to a friend in need. Should give him a flying start.

As for the antenna, there are two things which makes me object somewhat to it. For one, the antenna has a bit short cable, so it prohibits you from optimal placement. You would want as much unobstructed sky-view as possible. The more horizon the better is the general rule. This allows more sats and hence better geometries and better solution. This is more important during surveying, but any errors built up during surveying of position will crank out time-errors later. More sats also enables noise and bias-sources to be reduced when time-navigation. The second objection is that I think it can be a bit weak on the amplification, which translates into problem with extending the cable.

Also, the magnet is intended for car use, and I have a similar antenna on my car and it works fairly well for that task. It may not correlate well with how you want to mount your antenna.

Don't get me wrong, it will work. It won't just be the best antenna in the long run. The good thing is, you will be up and running. You can get another antenna later and beef it up.

A few of us has large Choke ring antennas. They provide better suppression of reflections and stable phase centers is usually associated with that. Using such an antenna with a Thunderbolt will work well, but is a bit over the top. Once the time-nut bug bites you hard, you are down that trail yourself.

Then, next up is dual frequency receivers and antennas. Starts to be meaningfull if you are running a Rubidium or better as your house-clock.

So, the link goes to what should be a great start-kit. All that you need. Price is reasnoble IMHO. Can't recall that particular seller before.

Cheers,
Magnus

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